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Revision as of 17:35, 15 November 2007 view sourceAnonEMouse (talk | contribs)13,200 edits Paul Wolfowitz‎: Agree with CoolHandLuke and Thatcher131.← Previous edit Revision as of 17:39, 15 November 2007 view source David Shankbone (talk | contribs)Autopatrolled, Extended confirmed users, Pending changes reviewers, Rollbackers22,979 edits Paul Wolfowitz‎: I agree as well and have withdrawn support of including it.Next edit →
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:OR isn't allowed on Misplaced Pages, but it allowed on a sister project. The OR policy states that WP is not to be used for OR - but that doesn't mean that OR, as evidenced with many other editors, is disallowed to make it on here, especially since it's the words of a notable person (as opposed to a study, etc.) --<font color="#0000C0">David</font> ''']''' 03:52, 15 November 2007 (UTC) :OR isn't allowed on Misplaced Pages, but it allowed on a sister project. The OR policy states that WP is not to be used for OR - but that doesn't mean that OR, as evidenced with many other editors, is disallowed to make it on here, especially since it's the words of a notable person (as opposed to a study, etc.) --<font color="#0000C0">David</font> ''']''' 03:52, 15 November 2007 (UTC)
:: Agree with CoolHandLuke and Thatcher131. This is inappropriate. It's not as if there is any shortage of journalists, even journalists at major papers, with strong opinions about Paul Wolfowitz, we have many better sources than this, which smacks of original research. In this interview, Unger is speaking off the cuff, he is using his memory, he isn't checking his sources for every statement he makes. We can cite his books, if Unger wrote an article, we can cite that, because then he probably is checking every sentence is in the right place, but this interview can really only be cited for Unger's views on Wolfowitz. --] <sup>]</sup> 17:35, 15 November 2007 (UTC) :: Agree with CoolHandLuke and Thatcher131. This is inappropriate. It's not as if there is any shortage of journalists, even journalists at major papers, with strong opinions about Paul Wolfowitz, we have many better sources than this, which smacks of original research. In this interview, Unger is speaking off the cuff, he is using his memory, he isn't checking his sources for every statement he makes. We can cite his books, if Unger wrote an article, we can cite that, because then he probably is checking every sentence is in the right place, but this interview can really only be cited for Unger's views on Wolfowitz. --] <sup>]</sup> 17:35, 15 November 2007 (UTC)
::: I agree as well and have withdrawn support of including it. --<font color="#0000C0">David</font> ''']''' 17:39, 15 November 2007 (UTC)


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    Ongoing WP:BLP-related concerns

    The following subsections may apply to any or all Biographies of living persons.

    Unreferenced BLPs

    There are over 8300 articles on living people that have the {{unreferenced}} tag. This is a list of them. (warning: pretty big page) —Signed, your friendly neighborhood MessedRocker. 00:07, 22 April 2007 (UTC)

    Oh shit, that's worse than I thought.--Doc 00:19, 22 April 2007 (UTC)
    Just looking through a few of them, they have the unreferenced tag at the top but with no indication in the text what the problematic unreferenced material is. It would be good if people could be encouraged not to use the general unreferenced tag, but to add the fact/citation-needed tag to the contentious issues. SlimVirgin 00:24, 22 April 2007 (UTC)
    Actually, {{fact}} should NEVER be used on contentious issues on BLPs. Uncited contentious material should simply be removed.--Doc 02:49, 22 April 2007 (UTC)
    Aye, and originally the list was going to include {{fact}}-transcluders AND {{unreferenced}}-transcluders but the latter is a bigger priority, so let's do that first. —Signed, your friendly neighborhood MessedRocker. 11:52, 22 April 2007 (UTC)

    For now, I have completed my search. The result: 17 lists of articles (16 of which contain around 1000 articles) on living people that contain {{unreferenced}}, {{unreferencedsect}}, {{more sources}}, or {{fact}}. Over 16,000 articles on living people that are not completely referenced. Let's get working. —Signed, your friendly neighborhood MessedRocker. 16:54, 22 April 2007 (UTC)

    Unless the policy has morphed again, an {{unreferenced}} BLP that contains no controversial statement is not a violation; many of these probably qualify. {{fact}} is probably more serious. Septentrionalis PMAnderson 04:48, 5 October 2007 (UTC)
    This list was updated again recently; as of May 19, 2008, there were 14,679 totally unreferenced biographies and 13,405 biographies with the 'fact' tag. Let's get to work! -- phoebe / (talk to me) 00:37, 21 June 2008 (UTC)

    Working mainly in visual arts articles, I come across a lot of unreferenced BLPs. The majority are written by a new user, whose only contributions are to that article and related, i.e. most likely either the subject of the article or an agent for them. It would be interesting to see how many unreferenced BLPs fit this category. Ty 10:02, 10 July 2008 (UTC)

    Just a FYI, BLP's with insufficient sourcing should preferably get the template {{BLPsources}} (Category:BLP articles lacking sources), while completely unsourced BLP's should get {{BLPunsourced}}. The latter is brandnew so the Category:Unreferenced BLPs is nearly empty. I hope these can be of help! Fram (talk) 15:39, 18 November 2008 (UTC)
    I was thinking of some form of triage to look at harm mimimization given the huge number of unreferenced bits and pieces. Would it be helpful to have two extra templates - one which ran along the lines of "This highly controversial material needs to be referenced" and one for "moderately controversial...". The idea being the unreferenced sections within BLPs are then given some form of rank in terms of urgency? Does this already exist? This may make the list somewhat more manageable as editors can find an easy place to figure out what to prioritize. Cheers, Casliber (talk · contribs) 00:12, 20 November 2008 (UTC)
    Well, the first ("highly controversial") needs to be removed asap, not templated. The second is debatable. I don't think it can do any harm, but I'll focus for now on tagging the completely unsourced BLP's. Fram (talk) 09:24, 20 November 2008 (UTC)
    OK, good point - I was musing on ones where it is/was common knowledge maybe. I will try to think of/look for some. Cheers, Casliber (talk · contribs) 11:23, 20 November 2008 (UTC)

    sohh.com

    Similar to whutdat.com (see below), I'm seeing an alarming number of hip-hop biographies attributing SOHH.com as a source. It claims to be a magazine, but it really looks like an over-sensationalized blog to me. At the time of this writing, there are 310+ biographical pages linking to this site. Nearly all of the links are either dead or redirect to a blog site which contain highly questionable tabloid-like articles. Example headline: "Courtney Love Needs to Shut Her “Hole”! Junkie Grunge Queen Thinks VMAs Too "Urban”" Community input is requested here. JBsupreme (talk) 08:38, 10 September 2008 (UTC)

    You are indeed looking at an over-sensationalized blog with your example headline. That blog post clearly contains the text . So draw a distinction between blog posts and sohh news articles.
    Special:Linksearch/blogs.sohh.com gives a more manageable 24 cites that probably could stand some scrutiny. 86.44.24.76 (talk) 05:30, 19 November 2008 (UTC)

    Whutdat.com

    I'm witnessing some hip-hop biographies being sourced to a website called "whutdat.com". The site looks like a blog to me but I can't really be too sure these days. Is this a reliable source or should it be thrown out? My senses tell me its the latter but I'd like a second or third opinion. Thanks, JBsupreme (talk) 08:34, 10 September 2008 (UTC)

    NNDB Notable Names Database

    Is the National Names Database a reliable source? The Talk:NNDB page discussion leans against using it. One editor mentions that Jimbo is very against it, especially as a primary source. It seems to be used quite frequently on biographies. I've challenged it on the Paul Wolfowitz page, but would appreciate more input from others. Notmyrealname 20:36, 3 May 2007 (UTC)

    No, it is not a reliable source for any sort of controversial or disputed information. FCYTravis 22:30, 3 May 2007 (UTC)
    Is this an official policy or just an opinion? —The preceding unsigned comment was added by Notmyrealname (talkcontribs) 19:01, 4 May 2007 (UTC).
    From WP:RS: "Reliable sources are credible published materials with a reliable publication process; their authors are generally regarded as trustworthy, or are authoritative in relation to the subject at hand." We do not know who the authors of the NNDB are, and thus we have no way of knowing how credible or trustworthy the information is. What we do know is that many of the articles (c.f. the NNDB article on Michael Jackson) are written from a clearly-biased perspective with the intent of generating maximum lulz. Our biographies of living persons policy demands the absolute strictest standards of sourcing and neutrality when we maintain a biography of a living person, and further requires that we use great caution in sourcing any claim which may be controversial, derogatory or disputed. Citing NNDB for something like a birthplace is one thing, citing it for a claim that someone was arrested for <insert scandalous crime here> is entirely another. Even then, it shouldn't be cited unless it's absolutely the last resort - and if it is, we probably shouldn't have an article on the subject anyway. FCYTravis 21:31, 4 May 2007 (UTC)
    I ran into one case where the NNDB said a person was born in 1954 but his WP article said he was drafted into the army in 1962. Steve Dufour 00:47, 10 May 2007 (UTC)
    Here's the quote from Jimbo Wales-Why on earth should we consider it a valid source? It seems to me to be riddled with errors, many of which were lifted directly from Misplaced Pages. To my knowledge, it should be regarded like Misplaced Pages: not a valid source for anything in Misplaced Pages. We need to stick to REAL reliable sources, you know, like newspapers, magazines, books. Random websites are a very bad idea.--Jimbo Wales 18:03, 30 January 2007 (UTC) Notmyrealname 02:30, 10 May 2007 (UTC)

    NNDB is definitely an unreliable source, especially when it's about sexual orientation, risk factors and trivia. As for the newspapers, their reliability is often questionable. By principle, the tabloids must be considered most unreliable sources... Bachibz, 04 August 2007

    The NNDB contains reams of errors and misclassifications (calling all world leaders "heads of state", for instance, or calling all cardiac deaths "heart failure" - that one's inexcusably stupid). There's no way to correct the errors (most corrections end up thrown out from what I can see) and the database owners seem to care more about sensationalism than fact. For some years they reported the Catherine the Great horse story as if it were gospel truth. If the NNDB said the sun rose in the east, I'd verify first. Entertaining but wholly unreliable. --NellieBly (talk) 09:57, 22 March 2008 (UTC)

    Jewish Virtual Library

    There seems to be a similar problem as above with the Jewish Virtual Library, especially as a source for biographical information. Sourcing seems to be very vague and often cites[REDACTED] itself. A few examples: , , , . As with the NNDB, if a source is determined to be unreliable, shouldn't it be prohibited from being listed in the references section as well? It seems that this might be used as a way to sneak in information that otherwise wouldn't make it into the wiki article. (I've tried to raise this issue on the Talk:Jewish Virtual Library page and the Misplaced Pages talk:Reliable sources pages as well but this seems to be a particular problem for biographical info).Notmyrealname 12:42, 5 May 2007 (UTC)

    I would treat it as a convenience source, with great care taken about POV. The sponsorship is by "The AMERICAN-ISRAELI COOPERATIVE ENTERPRISE (AICE) was established in 1993 as a nonprofit 501(c)(3), nonpartisan organization to strengthen the U.S.-Israel relationship by emphasizing the fundamentals of the alliance — the values our nations share." The material posted there is only as authoritative as the source or poster may be authoritative--it always gives the source, but only sometimes the exact link. Looking at their index of biographies, the individual ones link to a variety of useful sources of varying reliability. It obviously cannot be used to prove anything contentious--but since it usually omits negative information, little contentious is likely to be found.DGG 21:43, 20 May 2007 (UTC)
    Well, one concern is that it's a back-door way of implying a person's religion when there isn't a proper way to do it that complies with WP:BLP. It's extremely rare for them to site any of their sources with specificity (I haven't seen any cases of it other than "Republican Jewish Committee" or "Misplaced Pages"), so there's no easy way to fact check them. I don't see how this resolves any of the concerns that Jimmy Wales raises above about the NNDB. Notmyrealname 22:09, 20 May 2007 (UTC)
    I have to agree with Notmyrealname on this, we should not be citing the Jewish Virtual Library for any living person biography. JBsupreme (talk) 08:48, 10 September 2008 (UTC)
    Can we also agree that for similar and even stronger reasons citing http://www.jewwatch.com/jew-entertainment-folder.html is deprecated? ϢereSpielChequers 17:48, 13 September 2008 (UTC)
    Oy, vey. Thanks for introducing me to THAT little slice of heaven. :) I agree, it should not be a source for info in any BLP. David in DC (talk) 18:34, 13 September 2008 (UTC)
    I've now searched for Jewwatch and only found Jew Watch, Google bomb, Steven Weinstock and Zionist Occupation Government, all of which makes sense to me. But I don't think that wiki search finds links such as the one on this page or the one I reverted. Anyone know how to search for Websites being quoted in references? ϢereSpielChequers 10:45, 14 September 2008 (UTC)
    I raised this at the London meetup and have been given a couple of techniques; googling this way gets reassuringly only 40 hits, one in Hebrew which I doubt needs translating and most of the rest in archives and discussions on user pages about hate sites. But on Special:linksearch jewwatch.com comes up 69 times including some that I think need checking out. ϢereSpielChequers 17:12, 16 September 2008 (UTC)

    f1fanatic

    This site is being used as a reference on a number of Formula 1 biographies. It appears to be fan-run and self-published site, without the fact-checking and editorial oversight WP:RS requires, and as such may not meet standards outlined in WP:BLP#Sources. Most, if not all, of the links were added by the site's owner(s) and/or author(s), which raises additional WP:COI issues. The site has other problems, for instance displaying images with no copyright info (http://www.f1fanatic.co.uk/wallpapers/) and linking to copyvio Youtube clips (http://www.f1fanatic.co.uk/2006/06/18/100-greatest-f1-videos-part-i/). There has been some prior talk page discussion about the link's appropriateness (f1fanatic.co.uk as a reference, External link - F1F biography). --Muchness 10:12, 17 July 2007 (UTC)

    WhosDatedWho.com

    Not a lot of links so far, but watch for this site to be used as a reference supporting celebrity relationships. I've started searching for reliable-source verification for the information (some of it is no doubt accurate) and removing the link and any relationships that can't be reliably verified elsewhere. From the editorial policy of the site:

    Information contained on the WhosDatedWho.com website listed has not been independently verified by WhosDatedWho.com. WhosDatedWho.com does not and can not review all materials posted to the WhosDatedWho.com Web Site by users, and WhosDatedWho.com is not responsible for any such materials posted by users.

    --Risker 04:50, 12 November 2007 (UTC)

    I am a representative of this site and appreciate that[REDACTED] needs accurate sources for its information. I acknowledge your concerns and will ensure these are taken into account in our future site update. We are working to improve the accuracy of the information posted on our site and are introducing a verification mechanism in the near future. We recently gave editors the ability to post links to sources for every relationship published on the site. I would also like to state that like wikipedia, all of our content is edited by editors, with our senior editors having ultimate control over what is published.

    --Aamair (talk) 07:35, 19 November 2007 (UTC)

    • No matter how reliable the information on the WhosDatedWho.com website is supposedly made, it doesn't change the fact that the website is a tertiary source, like Misplaced Pages. This means it definately can't be used to assert notability, and will probably never be reliable enough to cite content either. —gorgan_almighty (talk) 13:21, 6 December 2007 (UTC)
    If we still have a representative of the site watching this, is there any way its domain name can be changed to WhosDatedWhom.com? For the impressionable kids out there? :) MastCell 19:56, 6 December 2007 (UTC)
    It's true that WDW can't be used as a source itself, but it might be used to find sources that can be included. —Ashley Y 00:32, 25 January 2008 (UTC)

    WP:BLP#Reliable sources policy section itself

    • Edit warring, protection, unprotection, non-consensus changes, edit warring, protection by administrator involved in previously editing this project page. For contexts of problems affecting the protected current version of this section of the project policy page, please see Misplaced Pages talk:Biographies of living persons (and archives). Thank you. --NYScholar 00:11, 29 August 2007 (UTC)
      • As the protecting admin, I'll leave a quick note regarding the part about "protection by administrator involved in previously editing this project page". First, there are probably relatively few admins who haven't edited a policy page, including WP:BLP. Second, although the page is on my watchlist, I have for the last month or so stayed away from the constant disputes that seem to plague it. My last edit, and the only one affected by the dispute which led to this page protection, was made 10 days ago (on August 18). It consisted solely of a minor rewording and did not constitute a change in meaning. As far as the two issues currently under dispute ... I don't feel strongly about either of them. Third, the version I protected, inevitably The Wrong Version, was the one that happened to be there when I noticed the escalating (both in the nature of comments and frequency of reverts) edit-warring. — Black Falcon 00:38, 29 August 2007 (UTC)

    Porn actors' birth names

    This discussion has been collapsed.

    The last several days worth of edits at Lukas Ridgeston, Tim Hamilton (porn star), and the March 14 entry for Johan Paulik raise serious BLP issues. Would someone review them please? David in DC (talk) 01:27, 5 June 2008 (UTC)

    Yes I will address them. When an actor's real name is reliably sourced and widely disseminated it may be placed on the article. Addresses and phone numbers should not be placed on the article. Repeated removal of well sourced and widely disseminated names should be regarded, in my opinion, as vandalism. John celona (talk) 13:49, 5 June 2008 (UTC)
    What about the BLP policy of presumption in the favor of privacy, especially when it doesn't help the WP project in any way. BLP policy states that respecting the basic human dignity of the subject is essential, and other editors have noted that "outing" these people's birth names (it's ok to use their public stage name) assists in stalking and potential danger to the subjects. There is no real benefit and there is real potential for harm. This is straight from BLP Policy: "When the name of a private individual has not been widely disseminated OR HAS BEEN INTENTIONALLY CONCEALED **which is the case for these subjects**, it is often preferable to omit it, especially when doing so does not result in a significant loss of context" --Jkp212 (talk) 14:31, 5 June 2008 (UTC)
    This surely must not be the first time such matters have been discussed on Misplaced Pages. Does anyone have pointers to previous threads? I could imagine making the answer depend on whether a large, mainstream publication had revealed the persons' real name. If the real name has already appeared in the New York Times or Newsweek then keeping it out of the article is probably not worth the effort, and has little privacy value. EdJohnston (talk) 17:08, 5 June 2008 (UTC)
    As you well know the phrase OR HAS BEEN INTENTIONALLY CONCEALED which you so helpfully capitalise is immediately followed by AS IN CERTAIN COURT CASES. Since there are no court cases and the actors names are VERY widely disseminated they belong in the article. They are actors which is as much not a "non-public" occupation as can be imagined. John celona (talk) 18:58, 5 June 2008 (UTC)
    The names have not been mentioned in any large, mainstream publication and are NOT widely disseminated. Widely is certainly more than 5 obscure gay porn blog sources for Tim Hamilton (the interview in question published twice!) or one source only for Lukas Ridgeston plus about 14 gay porn listings with no real value at all. For Lukas Ridgeston the name has been intentionally disclosed in the review of that gay magazine. This has been done against the expressed wish of the actor and production company Bel Ami. AS IN CERTAIN COURT CASES is NOT a concluding enumeration but an example. Even with English not being my native language I can read the difference. So no need for a court case here either. There is no real benefit in publishing the names and no significant loss of context in not doing so. On the contrary revealing the names in this or in any future case violates the WP principles mentioned by Jkp212. Putting them back in repeatedly should be regarded, in my opinion, as vandalism. Just as John celona said "an actor's real name ... may be placed on the article". But it does not have to be placed, which is in accordance with the BLP policy of presumption in the favor of privacy. (Jamesbeat (talk) 19:50, 5 June 2008 (UTC)
    "As in certain court cases" is one example of where a name has been intentionally concealed. Actors such as these who choose to have stages names are also intentionally concealing their birth name, which they have every right to do. --Jkp212 (talk) 20:21, 5 June 2008 (UTC)

    The Brandy Alexandre page is the model. Please look at the code. If you hit "edit this page", the first thing you see at the top is code from Jimmy Wales asking that her birth name not be revealed. Need a better authority than that? David in DC (talk) 21:24, 5 June 2008 (UTC)

    I have to say User:EdJohnston makes a good point. Where is the prior discussion on this? I don't see any for Brandy Alexandre, even on the talk page. Was it archived? What about for Hamilton or Ridgeston or any of the others? Viewing the prior consensus on the subject would be most helpful in this discussion. Thanks. --Ebyabe (talk) 23:22, 5 June 2008 (UTC)
    What it actually says is "As a courtesy while we discuss the issues surrounding this article". In other words-temporary. Plus, what[REDACTED] regulation says Luke Ford is not a reliable source. He is on dozens of other pages. provide the source please. as you have been told on many other issues: this is Wiki-pedia not David-pedia. John celona (talk) 00:40, 6 June 2008 (UTC)
    For everything that needs saying, read the archive here: It sets forth the views of Anon E. Mouse, Jimbo, and SavvyCat (Ms. Alexandre) as fully as necessary. About outing porn actor's names AND about the reliability of Luke Ford as a source. David in DC (talk) 03:14, 6 June 2008 (UTC)
    Well I know that a number of the participants in WP:P* (myself included) routinely pull out uncited names from porn star articles on simple WP:BLP issues... what if the name's wrong? And there are other stars besides Brandy who have had their names pulled from the article at the star's own request... Sasha Grey is one I remember offhand. Beyond that, the principles that John Celona mentions above ("an actor's real name is reliably sourced and widely disseminated") apply, and no, IMDB is not a reliable source for the name! Now if we can only get all the various editions to follow that last point; I know of one porn star complaining about a foreign language Wiki that has their real name on it with IMDB as a "source", and her parents were getting hassled on it as a result of it (it's Katja Kassin & the German version)... unfortunately the Wiki in question doesn't seem to be responding to her complaints. Tabercil (talk) 06:05, 6 June 2008 (UTC)
    Some insight into User:John celona's attitude towards privacy and harm reduction may be gleaned from a Deletion Review a year ago, specifically this comment, this comment and this comment. --CalendarWatcher (talk) 14:34, 6 June 2008 (UTC)

    Outing people is bad. I dealt with porn star names (e.g. Tawnee Stone, Jordan Capri) way back in the dark ages before BLP even existed and even then we all agreed that Misplaced Pages should not be the primary venue for locating information such as this. If the mainstream media has published someone's identity, then okay, but we shall not rely on the blog of the guy who claims to have gone to high school with the actress. Nor shall we rely on the name that appears on the obscure trademark filing for the "character" (yes, this seriously came up). If you are going to publish information that may have real world consequences for someone then you ought to have sources that are at least as reliable and as visible as Misplaced Pages itself before doing so. Dragons flight (talk) 15:08, 6 June 2008 (UTC)

    If we change this policy we need to change it universally, or not at all, and have admin deletes of history of reference to birth names. --BenBurch (talk) 17:31, 6 June 2008 (UTC)
    This is going to come up repeatedly in the future. In the Brandy Alexandre case, some editors seemed to think that we were just applying the reliable source policy to birth names, and only including those that were reliably attested. But the above discussion tells me that some editors *still* don't want real names included even when published in sources that would be accepted as reliable for other purposes. If this is the case, we should know. EdJohnston (talk) 18:17, 6 June 2008 (UTC)
    This is really disturbing to me. Someone really needs to explain to User:John celona that Misplaced Pages isn't just a place that reports every lurid detail about sexually related articles. He's strongly argued for the inclusion of all material related to underage sex crime victims multiple times (as evidenced by CalendarWatcher) and now he's trying to disseminate private details about porn actors because marginally reliable sources (and frankly some unreliable sources) report them. Ugh. No. If he wants to start a wiki of his own that exploits these people he is welcome to do so, but I don't think that kind of attitude is appropriate here. AniMate 18:36, 6 June 2008 (UTC)
    Are you suggesting that a name attested by a reliable source should still be suppressed at the request of the subject? We need to know if you are asking for a policy change or not. EdJohnston (talk) 18:45, 6 June 2008 (UTC)
    I would say a policy change is in order. If someone's lone claim to fame is pornography and they want to reclaim some of their privacy, then absolutely we should remove their real name. In fact, I would argue that more often than not, real names shouldn't be used unless they are widely used by the mainstream media. For that to happen, I'm thinking most porn stars would have to have some other claim to fame besides having sex on film. AniMate 18:54, 6 June 2008 (UTC)
    I am in agreement with a policy change. There is no gain to "outing" people like this. --Jkp212 (talk) 19:30, 6 June 2008 (UTC)
    So let's throw an hypothetical example out to see how this proposed change works... say Savanna Samson comes to us and says "I don't want my real name used in the article". If you look at the article, there is a reference for it which points directly to an article in the New York Times, which is probably one of the more reliable sources out there and also one of the more visible ones (the third highest circulation according to List of newspapers in the United States by circulation). So... do we pull the name or not? Tabercil (talk) 20:41, 6 June 2008 (UTC)
    In that case I would say probably not, though that would ultimately depend on why she wanted her name removed. The argument for removal of real names is that these people use pseudonyms to obscure their identities. While she will always be better known as Savanna Samson, I think it's clear with that interview and her other projects that she has no intention of obfuscating her identity anymore. AniMate 21:04, 6 June 2008 (UTC)
    I lean toward yes. We take her birth name out, but use the NYT article as a source for some other fact, if it backs one. NYT has it's editorial discretion and we have ours. Ours protects the privacy (and safety) of living persons more than theirs does. That's not censorship, it's editing.
    I can imagine a case where the answer is no. If Savanna ever kills someone on a porn set, the names are gonna be linked. Or if she testifies before Congress, under her birth name, in support of branding strippers and porn stars' with a Scarlet X. But we ought to set the bar pretty high in favor of omitting birth names. David in DC (talk) 21:09, 6 June 2008 (UTC)
    My own personal thinking is probably not to remove the name in this instance. Why? Because of the visibility and reliability of the source of the name, unless it can be shown to be in error, removing the name would be akin to closing the barn door long after the horse has disappeared over the horizon. However, if the source was much thinner, then I can the name being removed. However, we should clearly have a requirement that the real name must be sourced; I know the the guidelines for WP:P* (which perhaps is the work group closest to the subject) are clear as seen here. Tabercil (talk) 21:36, 6 June 2008 (UTC)
    Just because something is verifiable and well sourced, doesn't mean we include it in articles. WP:BLP often trumps reliable sources and verifiability. AniMate 21:40, 6 June 2008 (UTC)
    If that's a policy change, what is the limitation on it? Any subject of a biography can ask for their real name to be excluded, no matter how well known it is? EdJohnston (talk) 21:49, 6 June 2008 (UTC)

    (undent) Is it specifically laid out in policy? No, but there is a presumption in favor of the privacy of marginally notable people. Exact birth dates are routinely removed for the marginally notable (and that is policy), and (generally speaking) porn stars real names aren't very well known. Looking through the links supplied by CalendarWatcher above, you'll see a case where two minors who were victims of sex crimes had the majority of personal information about them removed from the encyclopedia. All of the information about them was ridiculously well sourced to major and undeniably reliable news agencies. Still, the information was removed and the articles redirected (if I'm not mistaken). I think the removal of real names is definitely up for interpretation, but in the case of a porn star with very few or no other accomplishments... I think we should remove without prejudice unless a valid argument can be made to include them. AniMate 22:02, 6 June 2008 (UTC)

    I'm agreeing that we could follow a rule where such names are sometimes omitted. I just need someone to give the scope of the rule so that we don't need a lengthy discussion every time the subject comes up again. If the existing policy is too vague in this area we could ask for the policy to be made specific. You could even ask for a change in policy that is limited to porn stars, to avoid widening the debate too much. (Comparing to the example given by AniMate, porn stars don't seem to have much in common with minors who are the victims of sex crimes). EdJohnston (talk) 01:40, 7 June 2008 (UTC)
    You're right that there is nothing in common between the two, and I hope I didn't imply that there was. I'm not sure that there is a clear cut line that can be determined other than saying "err on the side of privacy". Savanna Samson, for instance, has clearly made an attempt to market herself to a more mainstream audience outside of porn. The same goes for Jenna Jameson and Jeff Stryker. Tim Hamilton, Johan Paulik, and Lukas Ridgeston don't seem to have any encyclopedic accomplishments outside of pornography. There is no benefit to revealing their real names, and there could in fact be great harm to them in doing so. AniMate 02:30, 7 June 2008 (UTC)
    Thank you for bringing it back to Paulik, Ridgeston and Hamiliton. It's poor judgment to out any of these three. We need the opposite kind of rule than the one EdJohnston suggests above. We need a rule for when a porn actor's birth name should be included. The presumption should be against inserting these birth names, except in the most extraordinary of circumstance. People act in porn under assumed names for reasons of privacy and safety. We should honor the request for safety and privacy that acting under a stage name clearly requests. David in DC (talk) 02:37, 7 June 2008 (UTC)
    I'm not sure that David in DC's idea would leave us with a clear rule to follow. I like AniMate's last comment because I can deduce a rule from it. How about:
    • Give the real names of porn stars only when the names are reliably sourced, and only when the stars are noted for some activities outside of pornography.
    This would cause us to include the real names of Jenna Jameson and Jeff Stryker, and omit the names of Lukas Ridgeston, Tim Hamilton (porn star) and Johan Paulik. EdJohnston (talk) 02:50, 7 June 2008 (UTC)
    Well the first clause I have no problems with, and the second one shouldn't be a problem because anything that'll cause them to be mentioned by a reliable source will most likely be for outside of porn. Tabercil (talk) 03:45, 7 June 2008 (UTC)
    I like both clauses too, and I personally feel it's essential to include the second part so that there is clarity on that point. --Jkp212 (talk) 05:47, 7 June 2008 (UTC)

    Section break

    Give the real names of porn stars only when the names are reliably sourced, and only when the stars are noted for some activities outside of pornography.

    This seems to be a popular and rational choice. Are there any objections? If there are, how would they be beneficial to building an encyclopedia? AniMate 07:38, 7 June 2008 (UTC)

    The "objection" is very simple. If an actor's name is widely disseminated and reliably sourced it should be in the article. If one can google the actor's stage name along with the words "real name", "birth name", etc. and come up with a reliable source on the first page than the proverbial cat has escaped the bag. John celona (talk) 13:37, 7 June 2008 (UTC)
    Your "objection" is of course not as simple as you try to tell again and again. It makes a BIG difference if you read a WP article about people in the porn business, which includes the real name, or if you read the same article without the real name and having to do an additional Google search on your own, which most people have no interest in at all except they have some ill intentions. As said above regarding Lukas Ridgeston and Tim Hamilton widely disseminated and reliably sourced are different from what Google is coming up with for both cases. To avoid any future discussions about this IMO the second part of the statement above in italic is very crucial. (Jamesbeat (talk) 15:56, 7 June 2008 (UTC))
    It's important for WP to take a stand that, as many of the other editors, have mentioned above, WP should not be the primary vehicle for the spreading of this information unless there is a special reason (like activities outside of porn).. In Celona's example, he mentioned a situation where someone is actively seeking out a birth name of the actor's name (like a stalker); however, most people will come to the WP article not actively seeking out the actor's birth name, and therefore WP becomes the primary vehicle for the spread of this information. In other words, it's more complicated than just being reliably sourced, as Animate points out above. Secondly, without taking a firm stand you open up the door for irresponsible edits, such as this one by Celona ] where the "reliable source" he cited was a porn site. --Jkp212 (talk) 16:01, 7 June 2008 (UTC)
    Widely disseminated? Here is a google search for Tim Hamilton with the "real" name you added to his article. John, you need to understand that we have to edit responsibly. It is something you seem to fight every time someone tells you that information isn't appropriate for the encyclopedia. You fought bitterly for all possible information to be written about two minors who were victims of sex crimes. You really have to start understanding WP:BLP and that when it is applied is not censorship but editors acting responsibly. AniMate 16:37, 7 June 2008 (UTC)
    Both clauses make sense to me. Responsible editorial discretion is not censorship. WP:BLP is a more restrictive policy than many other institutions follow. It's one we should be rightly proud of. We should enforce it against indiscriminate, ill-advised, mean-spirited or careless editors. David in DC (talk) 20:05, 7 June 2008 (UTC)

    Per this discussion, I've deleted Ridgeston's birth name.David in DC (talk) 20:12, 7 June 2008 (UTC)

    Surely no one can argue Ridgeston's real name is not widely disseminated. I think it is more than absurd to say people with interest in celerities real names are "stalkers" John celona (talk) 22:29, 7 June 2008 (UTC)

    Here's a google search with the real name you provided for Ridgeston showing that it is also not widely known. Again, you really need to read WP:BLP because you really don't seem to understand it... or at least you don't want to. AniMate 22:33, 7 June 2008 (UTC)

    It is on almost every google hit! John celona (talk) 22:42, 7 June 2008 (UTC)
    21 google hits is a joke when you compare the 78,000 google hits returned for his stage name. If there are only twenty or so places on the web that report his name, then it is not a widely known fact. From WP:BLP When the name of a private individual has not been widely disseminated or has been intentionally concealed... This name is not widely known and it has been intentionally concealed. Let it go. AniMate 22:45, 7 June 2008 (UTC)
    I am disengaging from this issue-for now. It is sad that a handfull of pro-censorship editors can twist Misplaced Pages rules that compel boldness and inclusiveness and make them look like they compel a rather infantile, self-righteous censorship. For the record, for anyone reading this as an archive: There is NO regulation on Misplaced Pages distinguishing porn stars from any other actor or celebrity. If any actor's real name is reputably sourced and widely disseminated it SHOULD be in the article notwithstanding an actor's or a studio's wishes or alleged wishes. If a google search instantly reveals the actors real name through a reputable source the name belongs in the article. Don't be tricked by some sophist making the completely absurd argument that "20 sources isn't enough". Be bold and put the real name in. This is an encyclopedia not a game of "who can censor who" --many editors don't realize that John celona (talk) 00:20, 8 June 2008 (UTC)
    Blah, blah, blah....Celona, I am glad you reach out to those who are "reading this as an archive" -- clearly you will be remembered and looked back as the noble sole who fought hard for the right to "out" the private names of porn stars. --Jkp212 (talk) 00:28, 8 June 2008 (UTC)
    I intend to catalog and revert all attempts to remove real names from porn star articles as the removal is blatant violation of WP:POINT. Sorry, but when you decide to be a porn star, you are relinquishing your right to hide your name. This is not a matter of opinion, since it is necessary to comply with the COPPA law. Anyway, as with any actor or author, when a pseudonym is used it is conventional to give the legal name as well. There is no consensus to change this policy and no rationale other then more hysterical WP:BLP hand-wringing. I will take a stand on this issue because I'm sick and tired of the extremists decimating our biographies. Fix obvious BLP errors, but do not remove verifiable information because you have some personal beliefs on privacy. WP:NOT here to be your privacy battleground, so take it to discussion boards if you want to gripe about it. Again, their choice to become a porn star invalidates their right to keep their real name secret. Accuracy and NPOV always trump WP:BLP; we are here to write informative articles for our readers, not play PR Firm for the subjects of biographies. No harm is done by listing the legal name other then fringe concerns invented by concern trolls. --Dragon695 (talk) 22:12, 9 June 2008 (UTC)
    I disagree. And a lot of what you've typed is put pretty incivilly. "hen you decide to be a porn star, you are relinquishing your right to hide your name" is irrelevant. Getting the real name from a COPPA filing is the archetype of the behavior WP:NOR bans. And, as noted above, WP:BLP gives us pretty clear instructions on what to do if someone has purposely obsured their name, porn star or not. I think we're wise to be guided by the folks from the WP porn project, who have stated a pretty convincing case above, in my opinion, for removing porn actors' birth names unless they are known for something outside of porn.David in DC (talk) 22:24, 9 June 2008 (UTC)
    Yes, I was rude, but my frustration is borne from seeing well intentioned fans of WP:BLP go to extremes to reduce our biographies to crappy stubs. Somebody has to stop this nonsense. WP:BLP is not a be all and end all to this project. The point of this project is write accurate, verifiable articles. Including the legal name is part of the accurate part and poses very minimal privacy concerns for those who have chosen to become actors. What industry they act in is irrelevant. --Dragon695 (talk) 23:07, 9 June 2008 (UTC)

    "I intend to catalog" is very different from "I am unilaterally reverting". The recent edits to Tim Hamilton's page are a disruption. Please stop. David in DC (talk) 22:32, 9 June 2008 (UTC)

    Dragon says "fix obvious BLP errors"...One such obvious BLP error is including a poorly sourced name, the way Celona did above (source was a porn site)....You have encouraged him to engage in this type of behavior, which is not according to WP policy. --Jkp212 (talk) 22:56, 9 June 2008 (UTC)
    Fine, I will locate more reliable sources, including COPPA filings, and then re-insert the name. I will refrain from reverting any removals where the source was not reliable. But I reject this absurd notion that we must remove all legal names of actors because of privacy concerns. --Dragon695 (talk) 23:00, 9 June 2008 (UTC)
    No, I am WP:IAR because 3 or 4 biased editors do not get to reinterpret policy. Citing reliable sources, such as a COPPA filing, is not WP:OR. This is SOP for all actors, we list the pseudonym and the legal name. We do not make exceptions for pornographic actors. Again, WP:BLP is not part of the WP:FIVE and it does not trump reporting accurate, verifiable information where there are no REASONABLE privacy concerns. A legal name is not a valid privacy concern for an actor; their decision to be an actor disqualifies them from this right. --Dragon695 (talk) 22:58, 9 June 2008 (UTC)
    BRAVO to you! As General Macarthur said-"I have returned!" John celona (talk) 23:45, 9 June 2008 (UTC)
    1. You are not correct in stating that WP:BLP does not trump verifiable research -- it does. 2. You are, in fact, the one reinterpreting policy, which is pretty clear in terms of editing conservatively and trying to maintain privacy of semi-notable subjects. Especially when there is no clear benefit to the project to do otherwise. --Jkp212 (talk) 23:58, 9 June 2008 (UTC)
    Jkp12 is correct. WP:BLP does trump verifiability. It's there because not all available information is appropriate for Misplaced Pages. If you disagree, then I think you should go about trying to have WP:BLP rejected by the community, Dragon695. AniMate 00:08, 10 June 2008 (UTC)
    I totally agree on this. WP:BLP is fully respected here and violation of WP:POINT is utter nonsense. In his statement Dragon695 has clearly expressed that his real intentions are everything but neutral. But that is how articles should be written on any encyclopedia and on WP and not in a biased, ill-minded and ill-intentioned way. I apologize if I sound rude, but I am really upset about people like John celona and now Dragon695 spinning words and rules that are agreed upon by the community just to appear as victims of censorship when in fact they are the 'culprits' vandalizing established rules. (Jamesbeat (talk) 12:03, 10 June 2008 (UTC))
    Care to make a point that is actually valid? WP:BLP is not universally accepted and there are still very contentious issues that still exist. The debates that happen on its talk page are rancorous and often very divisive. So I reject the notion that it has universal support, but that is besides the point. The bottom line is that actors in films, whether they be pornographic or not, do not get the same level of privacy that an average person does. It is their choice to become a notable subject. All of our biographies of actors who use pseudonyms list the real name. WP:NPOV does trump WP:BLP in that one class of actor will not be favored over another. Since you will not be successful in eliminating the real names in actors like Marilyn Manson, you can not justify eliminating it a pornographic actor's biography. --Dragon695 (talk) 22:08, 18 June 2008 (UTC)
    Absolutely. And irregardless of BLP, I fail to see how adding the real names of people who are notable for their work in pornography under another name helps create a good article based on notable information about (their work in pornography under another name). If someone was notable for acting in pornography in the past and had now become an activist under another name and was engaging in activities that might become notable, then perhaps that other name would be suitable for inclusion to add research. But for the majority of these articles? Hell no. John Nevard (talk) 15:54, 10 June 2008 (UTC)
    Sorry John, but we have plenty of pointless information. All actors using pseudonyms also have their real names listed. This is the default for just about every biography. The reason you and others want it removed is why? Why should porn actors get special treatment? WP:NPOV is very clear, we do not play favorites. There are no privacy concerns, if the information is reliably sourced, in it goes. It's a matter of consistency and accuracy. I'm sorry if the person is ashamed of being a porn actor, but perhaps they should have thought of that before they willingly chose to enter that profession. In light of that, I have already been busy making requests for COPPA documentation where only non-reliable sources document the real name. As these are official, government mandated documents, their accuracy cannot be disputed. Lastly, if you want to see just one of hundreds of biographies where the real name of actors with stage names are listed, please see Marilyn Manson. Note, nobody calls him by his real name in the media, but it is still a very factually relevent part of a biography. --Dragon695 (talk) 21:50, 18 June 2008 (UTC)
    Can you inform the rest of us what a COPPA filing is and how does one go about requesting this information? I mean is it a government document or database that's publicly available? Can you also explain to me how and why pornographic actors must disclose their real names to the public under COPPA when the law is aimed to protect the privacy of children when they surf the internet? I'm asking these questions because I believe you are advocating a point based on a misunderstanding of the law. Perhaps you're thinking of another law? Vinh1313 (talk) 17:29, 19 June 2008 (UTC)
    No BLP says:
    Caution should be applied when naming individuals who are discussed primarily in terms of a single event. When the name of a private individual has not been widely disseminated or has been intentionally concealed (such as in certain court cases), it is often preferable to omit it, especially when doing so does not result in a significant loss of context.
    — WP:BLP, Privacy of Names
    I reinterpret nothing. It clearly leaves it open for discussion and the intent of preserving name privacy, as noted by the example court cases, is mainly to deal with people who are victims or otherwise in positions of great danger. Porn actors are not inherently victims and thus should be treated like any other actor with a stage name -- we should list the real name. WP:NPOV demands that these class of actors get no different treatment than those who are non-pornographic actors. If you can argue why non-pornographic actors should have their real names listed and why pornographic actors should not, without violating WP:NPOV, I am willing to listen. However, the discretion is clearly on a case by case basis and is left to the editor. I am willing to compromise in that I will endorse a temporary removal if there is documented evidence that an actor's live is in direct danger. What I will not accept is a blanket policy to omit all real names of actors with stage names. --Dragon695 (talk) 22:38, 18 June 2008 (UTC)

    Consensus?

    Does this represent a consensus now?:

    Give the real names of porn stars only when the names are reliably sourced, and only when the stars are noted for some activities outside of pornography.

    It looks to me like it does. David in DC (talk) 17:19, 16 June 2008 (UTC)

    • I need clarification on the "notable activities" outside of pornography. Like say a family law dispute that makes the papers like the Racquel Darrian example . It's clear even from the newspaper article that she is trying to protect her privacy. What if the actor willingly discloses his/her name in a porn publication like Dana DeArmond? Vinh1313 (talk) 16:32, 17 June 2008 (UTC)
    Well I can't see the Dana DeArmond example as being an issue as her actions make it clear she is voluntarily forgoing her privacy by deliberately and publicly using her real name. It's when the porn star is not acting to reveal their real name that's the crux of the issue here, such as the Raquel Darrian example, and I honestly can't imagine a messier situtation to use to try and figure out how the new policy works than the Darrian example. Tabercil (talk) 21:57, 17 June 2008 (UTC)

    No David you do not have a consensus. My own guideline would be to merely look and see if Answers.com gives there real name. You may have had a consensus a day ago but now you don't. I reserve the right to proceed without the consent of some extremely small group on some Wiki noticeboard. Please take note that Answers.com does not give out Brandy Alexandres real name. All of these cases must be taken on a case by case basis. You do not have consensus here. Sorry David but your interpretation of Blp and wiki is redolent of that of someone who has an agenda. These cases must be decided on a case by case basis or not at all. Albion moonlight (talk) 20:56, 18 June 2008 (UTC)

    I'm afraid answers.com is a Misplaced Pages content mirror. They take our content for many of the articles there. Best to not discriminate and just do like we do for all biographies of actors with pseudonyms. --Dragon695 (talk) 22:01, 18 June 2008 (UTC)

    Strong Oppose. Like I said above, WP:NPOV demands that we give no favoritism to certain classes of biographies. Actors are actors, they choose to be in the spotlight even if they use a stage name. Being a porn actor is not a crime nor is it done unwillingly. The sense I get here is concern trolls who feel that porn actors are under some sort of extraordinary threat. I would argue that they are no more threatened than Marilyn Manson. We must have reliable, factual biographies so, like in the case of Marilyn Manson, we will list the real name once in the lead section once a very reliable source for the name is found. This is standard biography writing 101 people. Again, WP:NPOV demands that we treat them no differently then any other actor with a pseudonym. --Dragon695 (talk) 22:01, 18 June 2008 (UTC)

    I don't know if there is a consensus or not, but I think everyone can agree that these names need to be impeccably sourced. So far the names that were being fought over had awful sources. Most likely if really reliable sources have their names, they are notable for something outside of porn. It's not hard to find Marilyn Manson's real name in a reliable source, or Tom Cruise. If we're talking about hunting down COPPA filings for Eastern European porn stars, then yes, that is a BLP violation. AniMate 22:53, 18 June 2008 (UTC)

    Reliable sources are in the eye of the beholder. No one gets too arbitrarily declare a source as unreliable, not even an admin can do that. Content disputes can and sometimes do go on forever. :Albion moonlight (talk) 23:30, 18 June 2008 (UTC)

    Fortunately, in this case the majority of the sources were blogs and lukeford.com which aren't considered reliable sources. There's nothing arbitrary about this, and if you'd investigated the background of this you'd see they're not reliable just like you'd see answers.com is a mirror of wikipedia. AniMate 23:35, 18 June 2008 (UTC)
    I think (LOL) Washington Post is a pretty good source. That hasn't stopped the pro-censorship trolls. see ]. John celona (talk) 00:33, 19 June 2008 (UTC)

    Strong Oppose To censor well-sourced (NY Times, washington Post, etc), widely disseminated names of actors is a rule only in David-pedia, not Misplaced Pages. Somebody needs to block this guy from manufacturing his own pro-censorship rules, falsely claiming "consensus" and then censoring all over Misplaced Pages with that spurious "consensus". An encyclopedia is about INCLUDING facts not censoring them. Save that for David-pedia. John celona (talk) 00:25, 19 June 2008 (UTC)

    Here's an idea. Stop focusing on other editors and start focusing on the issues. "Pro-censorship trolls" and "David-pedia" don't help your argument at all. AniMate 00:44, 19 June 2008 (UTC)
    The case that I referenced above is here : Albion moonlight (talk) 23:15, 28 June 2008 (UTC)

    Actualy AniMate I have seen many examples of the opposite wherein Answers.com does not mirror Misplaced Pages. But even if I am wrong about that, reliable sources are in fact in the eye of the beholder. You can wikilawyer until you are blue in the face and quote wiki rules adinfinitum but the fact of the matter is that the arbitration committee does not decide content issues. and mediation is not binding. The only rules that are enforced by admin are ones pursuant to behavior. You have heard of the ignore all rules rule on wiki have you not.? It all comes down to consensus and civility. Excuse me now while I go and collect examples pursuant to the mirror theory. Albion moonlight (talk) 04:52, 19 June 2008 (UTC)

    It does mirror Misplaced Pages, but unlike Misplaced Pages, it's not a Wiki that evolves in real time. That will allow for variations between the two platforms; however, each time this happens, answers.com catches up, and mirrors a more current Misplaced Pages version. --Jkp212 (talk) 05:27, 19 June 2008 (UTC)
    I'm actually arguing against Jkp212 about letting a porn star's name being allowed in an article. Ty Fox has had extensive coverage in reliable sources like the Washington Post, sourcing birth names to blogs is just sloppy. AniMate 05:38, 19 June 2008 (UTC)

    In general I agree with AniMate that sourcing birth names to blogs is sloppy, I do however think that there could very well be exceptions to any rule of thumb. Here, is an example of what I have been trying to say. It is one of the Pillars of wikpedia. I prefer it when we all agree to adhere to it. :Albion moonlight (talk) 08:42, 19 June 2008 (UTC)

    • Related case Talk:Calpernia_Addams#Calpernia.27s_wishes and the fact that should the subject of an article express concerns about their birth name being included in their article the edits can be deleted and oversighted. Birth names of performers are encyclopedic information and if they can be reliably sourced then they should be included, unless there is demonstrable harm on a case-by-case basis. The notion that this particular type of performer requires some extra notability beyond that of their chosen profession is untenable. I am aware of no other class of articles, biographical or otherwise, that are required to meet this burden either for inclusion in the encyclopedia or for the inclusion a particular piece of encyclopedic information. Otto4711 (talk) 18:19, 19 June 2008 (UTC)
    Not including in articles the real name of porn actors is in full compliance with WP:BLP and the other cited rules. It is utter nonsense to argue it is censorship. Censorship would be to delete those articles. It definitely makes a difference if people are acting in mainstream movies or in the porn business. Adding the real name of porn actors does not make a better article but is doing stalker's business like the Johan Paulik case has proofen. An encyclopedia has to be responsible and not to be like a tabloid. Therefore it should respect the privacy of people and not serve ill minded people like John celona, who use unreliable and bad sources to add real names. As the consensus above shows there is no arguing about publishing the names when the criteria are met. Again it is just spinning words and rules that have been agreed upon by the community to make editors appear as victims of censorship when in fact these editors are trying to 'vandalizing' established rules. (Jamesbeat (talk) 22:23, 19 June 2008 (UTC))
    Washington Post or a mainstream US Tv station are "unreliable and bad sources" only for self-appointed censors like you. John celona (talk) 11:45, 20 June 2008 (UTC)
    Dear John, you neither gave Washington Post nor a mainstream TV station as source in the two cases that led to this discussion. Both I certainly would not have questioned as unreliable and bad sources and we would have argued about ethics and not about sources. What made the difference was that your sources then were a gay guide and a gay porn blog.

    Well James, you seem to misunderstand what wiki means by consensus I will assume good faith and remind you that consensus does not exist until everyone either agrees or agrees to disagree. That is clearly not the case here. Second of all you should really avoid making personal attacks by calling people ill minded or vandals. That kind of behavior can get you blocked from editing wikipedia. I am not an ill minded person James nor am I a vandal. So please take it easy on the insults. OK ?? They are not helpful. :Albion moonlight (talk) 05:13, 20 June 2008 (UTC)

    • I don't believe I used the word "censorship" in discussing this situation, but as long as you bring up that politically charged buzzword, I would point out the Misplaced Pages is not censored. There is a process in place on a case-by-case basis for dealing with the real name of anyone, porn performer or not, appearing in the article and that is to delete the edits and oversight them. I have not followed the alleged Johan Paulik "stalking" case but since Misplaced Pages requires reliable secondary sources the notion that his name not having been included in a Misplaced Pages article would have prevented a stalker or anyone else from finding his name is ludicrous, since to be in a Misplaced Pages article it needs to be available elsewhere already. There is no consensus that I see here that including real names of porn stars (or anyone else) is acceptable only if they are notable for something other than being a porn star. The requirement of reliable sourcing proposed here is redundant to existing policies and the proposed requirement that they be notable for something outside of pornography is stupid and I cannot support any suggestion that there is consensus for this requirement. Otto4711 (talk) 21:52, 20 June 2008 (UTC)
    It would not have prevented a stalker from finding the name. But it makes a BIG difference if you have to search the net on your own or you just go to Misplaced Pages as your primary source. Again. This is straight from BLP Policy: "When the name of a private individual has not been widely disseminated or has been intentionally concealed as in certain court cases, it is often preferable to omit it, especially when doing so does not result in a significant loss of context". The real names of porn actors have intentionally been concealed AND omitting them does not result in a significant loss of context. Both these WP criterias are met when dealing with this issue. But to avoid significant loss of context it was proposed that when these persons are notable for something outside of pornography the name couild be added if properly sourced, of course. So this requirement is anything but stupid. (Jamesbeat (talk) 22:13, 20 June 2008 (UTC))
    By the way, is there a single reliable source that Johan was stalked by someone because his real name was on Misplaced Pages? How can you stalk someone without their address or phone number neither of which appear (or should appear) on Misplaced Pages?John celona (talk) 23:38, 20 June 2008 (UTC)
    • I was wondering that myself. I did some looking around and couldn't find any indication that Johan has ever been stalked, either based on his Misplaced Pages article or otherwise. Even if he had been, the notion that Misplaced Pages is responsible for protecting people against stalkers is ludicrous. Anyone could decide to stalk any living person; should we remove all biographical information from all living people out of the fear that someone somewhere might stalk them? I completely support the notion that on a case-by-case basis, where the person (regardless of his or her occupation) can demonstrate that having their birth name in a Misplaced Pages article is causing them actual harm, then Misplaced Pages should restrict the inclusion of their birth name. "Someone might do something mean to me" is not a legitimate excuse for omitting encyclopedic and verifiable information. The notion that Misplaced Pages is responsible for the consequences of being a one-click stop for biographical information as opposed to forcing a hypothetical stalker to do a little extra work is silly. Otto4711 (talk) 23:47, 20 June 2008 (UTC)

    Amen to that. I think IDMB is a good enough source for birth names but perhaps not for gossip. But that does not mean I think any of us have the right to try and vilfy those who disagree with us. Wikilawyering can be very disruptive. All Blp cases need to be regarded on a case by case basis. It is not up to us to declare IDMB or any other source as unreliable for the whole of wikipedia. Jimbo and a few others have that right but we don't. :Albion moonlight (talk) 00:56, 21 June 2008 (UTC)

    For sourcing BLPs, all sources in an article must be proven to be reliable for the information they represent. If there's doubt, leave it out. That's what our policy says. --Anticipation of a New Lover's Arrival, The 17:28, 24 June 2008 (UTC)
    Welcome to Misplaced Pages and do have fun while you are learning about how things really work here. Albion moonlight (talk) 00:21, 25 June 2008 (UTC)
    Thanks for the welcome. As a longstanding Wikipedian who has contributed significantly to most areas of Misplaced Pages policy, I'm surprised to find that I'm still considered a newcomer. --Anticipation of a New Lover's Arrival, The 01:39, 27 June 2008 (UTC)
    Well to be fair, unless someone knows to look for the link to your previous username, then you do appear to be relatively new. Still, the idea of using shoddy sources for controversial BLp issues is appalling. AniMate 01:47, 27 June 2008 (UTC)

    Above, a couple of folks questioned whether Johan Paulik has, in fact been stalked. One has called trying to make sure WP doesn't become The Stalker's Handbook a silly endeavor.

    But there is a Slovak ice hockey player with the same name that is alleged to be Johan Paulik's birth name. He plays on an Irish ice hockey team and is listed here on WP. I can find no online source that indicates this ice hockey player has been stalked on the assumption that he is Johan Paulik. But it's not hard to believe. And Jamesbeat has reported to us that Johan Paulik HAS been stalked. There's no good reason to think JB made this up.

    First, do no harm. Not Silly. Err on the side of caution. Not Silly. Do unto others as you would have them do unto you. Very Not Silly.

    Irish soccer hooligans can be pretty vicious. It's hard to imagine that Irish ice hockey fans would be less so.David in DC (talk) 03:19, 25 June 2008 (UTC)

    I understand what you are saying David but I don't think wiki is responsible for the actions of soccer fans or hockey fans. I do not believe that JB made it up I just think his or her rationale is not all that compelling. Albion moonlight (talk) 05:38, 25 June 2008 (UTC) Albion moonlight (talk) 05:42, 25 June 2008 (UTC)
    Fair enough. We can agree to disagree. On another note, thank you for the chuckle. Your greeting to the new editor above made me laugh out loud when I followed the link to his talk page and understood your joke. David in DC (talk) 15:51, 25 June 2008 (UTC)
    There is no reason not to assume the "stalking" was made up. When asked for a RS the user dissapeared from the discussion. John celona (talk) 00:39, 27 June 2008 (UTC)
    Well, no reason except for WP:AGF anyway. But assuming JB's good faith is pretty important.David in DC (talk) 11:57, 27 June 2008 (UTC)

    Sorry for having 'disappeared'. But sometimes unexpected things happen and WP becomes the least important concern. The Johan Paulik stalking happened about ten years ago. It was reported over here at the time in a TV feature about the Prague gay scene. During a short interview Johan Paulik mentioned having been victim to a stalker because his real name had been published. The incident was also shortly discussed on a forum. The forum went offline around 2000. So there is no trace to be found any more, which leaves me of course with no real evidence to proof this story. But it was not made up.

    What I was trying to say about "to make sure WP doesn't become The Stalker's Handbook" is that contrary to the IMDb the real names are available on WP to everyone sometimes even accompanied by a picture for easy identification whereas the IMDb has no head shots. The IMDb even requires additional steps to view adult content. The name is also not on the first page. Call it nit-picking but it makes a big difference. For the reliability of the IMDb and the use of real names you should give this a try ]. Although adding data to the IMDb is monitored and has some restrictions for contributing a fair amount of unreliable and unsourced data gets published.

    Regarding COPPA filings. These are confidential documents mandated by the government but not intended to be published. So using them is a violation of BLP. (Jamesbeat (talk) 10:18, 27 June 2008 (UTC))

    Re COPPA filings. Using them as a source is pretty much the archetype of what WP:NOR prohibits.David in DC (talk) 12:00, 27 June 2008 (UTC)
    It does not really matter what any of us think about IDMB or any other source unless we have a consensus. And even then consensus can change at the drop of a hat. The link provided by Jamesbeat that declares that IDMB is is unreliable for real names provides no proof of its allegations and still would not be binding even if it did provide such proof. But now that I know that thus may be the case I would be more inclined to look for additional internet sources that provide the same name that IDMB does. Arguing about the reliability of sources is all too often used as a way to promote ones agenda. Each Blp must be taken on a case by case basis. It is as simple as that. The Ignore all rules pillar is a very powerful rule. :Albion moonlight (talk) 22:53, 27 June 2008 (UTC)
    Unless a source is known to be reliable, we don't use it for biographical information. imdb is far from being known to be reliable, and we should never use it for biographical information that is at all sensitive. For such purposes we must demand unimpeachable sources. --Anticipation of a New Lover's Arrival, The 23:33, 27 June 2008 (UTC)
    IMDb is not a reliable source for one reason: It uses user-submitted, unverified content. That is the definition of a non-reliable source. End of story. FCYTravis (talk) 00:12, 28 June 2008 (UTC)

    The story ends when a consensus says it ends. If someone wants to contest a sources reliabity they are allowed to do so by making a complaint to the Blp noticeboard. There is also a mediation committee but neither they or the arbitration committee decides content disputes. So here we are stuck in conundrum. There is no sense in Wikilawyering. Wiklawyering is disruptive. 00:48, 28 June 2008 (UTC): Albion moonlight (talk) 00:49, 28 June 2008 (UTC)

    There is no "consensus" about it - IMDb is not a reliable source for the purposes of sensitive and personal information. FCYTravis (talk) 01:05, 28 June 2008 (UTC)
    FCYTravis is an administrator. What I now reccomend is that anyone who wants to use IDMB as a source should first check with another administrator before they do so. I just reread the section on Blps and realized that admins are given too much power in dealing with sources. So in cases where admins insist that a source can not be used one would be foolish to use it without checking with another admin first. Albion moonlight (talk)
    It's not about whether I'm an admin or not :) It's about the simple fact that IMDb is composed of user-submitted content which is not necessarily verified or fact-checked. That means the information it contains is not necessarily accurate and there is no system of editing and supervision that works to ensure only truthful information is published. It would be like using Misplaced Pages as a source for a Misplaced Pages article. For biographies in particular, we need to take our information only from reliable sources, such as newspapers, reputable magazines and television programs, edited and fact-checked Web sites, etc. FCYTravis (talk) 08:57, 28 June 2008 (UTC)
    Could you please tell us where you get your information about IDMB ?
    One way to get the birth name information in without ultimately needing the permission of admin('s) is to simply say something like,it is widely believed that such and such's real name is, and use several references to back it up. I have seen this done when referring to hate groups as hate groups. The fact that a member of the arbitration committee was actively involved in that case, suggests to me that it it is OK to do that. : Albion moonlight (talk) 23:01, 28 June 2008 (UTC)

    The case that I referenced above can be found here : Albion moonlight (talk) 23:20, 28 June 2008 (UTC)

    What is acceptable for an organization, is not necessarily acceptable for a living person. It is not acceptable to use such unverified speculation in biographies. FCYTravis (talk) 01:23, 29 June 2008 (UTC)
    This is awful. You're actively trying to figure out ways to skirt policy. Policy isn't in place to hamper editors, it's here to help editors and protect the encyclopedia. I think you should re-read BLP and attempt to explain your understanding of it, since you and John celona both seem to have any idea why the policy is there and what it actually means. AniMate 02:15, 29 June 2008 (UTC)
    I am pointing out ways to get around what I and others view as a too narrow an interpretation of Blp policy. If Jimbo or one of those people in the upper most echelons want to keep the real names of pornstars a secret they have the power and the right to do so. The rest of us are stuck with business as usual. :Albion moonlight (talk) 05:07, 29 June 2008 (UTC)
    If BLP disallows something, the solution isn't to try and find a back door way to sneak around the policy - it's to leave the material out. Trying to Wikilawyer BLP is not a smart idea. FCYTravis (talk) 05:19, 29 June 2008 (UTC)
    It's definitely not a good idea to try to circumvent our policies. Although I've no doubt you don't intend anything underhanded, it's difficult for an administrator viewing your edits to work out whether or not you are engaging in a disruptive form of editing known as Gaming the system. Even if an administrator doesn't take action, other editors may begin to lose trust in you and, ultimately, in Misplaced Pages. Readers will see the weasel words in an article and lose faith. It's better to search for solid, unimpeachable information, if it exists, and cite it when you find it, being prepared to change your mind if your judgement is overruled. We all submit to this standard, nobody is asking you to do something that isn't expected of all of us. --Jenny 05:28, 29 June 2008 (UTC)
    NB: Until recently I edited Misplaced Pages using the account "Anticipation of a New Lover's Arrival, The" --Jenny 05:30, 29 June 2008 (UTC)

    Section break, again

    I must agree with Jenny (at least that's the current signature). Why you think this is such necessary information, I don't know, but you do. Again, WP:BLP is here to protect not only the subjects of articles, but it's also here to protect us. When it comes to real people, we have to be careful, thoughftul, and patient. It's really all summed up by this:

    I can NOT emphasize this enough. There seems to be a terrible bias among some editors that some sort of random speculative 'I heard it somewhere' pseudo information is to be tagged with a 'needs a cite' tag. Wrong. It should be removed, aggressively, unless it can be sourced. This is true of all information, but it is particularly true of negative information about living persons.
    –Jimmy Wales

    Pseudo information includes spurious claims from questionable websites. Clear enough? AniMate 06:25, 29 June 2008 (UTC)

    So go ahead and delete them where you find them and lets see what the rest of wiki has to say about it. I can live with a wiki that disallows all mention of a pornstars real names. But for some reason some of you seem unwilling to live with a[REDACTED] that does allow it. Anyway I am through with this discussion because it only seems to be going in circles. I assure you that I will not edit war with you or encourage others to do so. If one of those articles goes to an Rfc or to mediation or even arbitration I may join in. But as for this discussion if I am the only one blocking consensus (and I am one of 3 or 4], I hereby withdraw my dissent and agree to disagree. Best wishes to everyone.: Albion moonlight (talk) 07:51, 29 June 2008 (UTC)

    I don't particularly like the idea of censoring real names of actors commonly known by their stage names based on what type of film they perform in. That doesn't follow me as particularly logical, and it seems to me like a gross violation of the principle of a neutral point of view toward which we are supposed to be striving toward.

    Naturally, if there's only sketchy information available (like citations on blogs), then it should be removed, just like any information that can't be reliably sourced should be; but the idea of removing information that can be reliably sourced simply because someone doesn't like it and tried to hide it really rubs me the wrong way. This isn't a case like Genie (where I also argued for the inclusion of the real name), where the subject at least didn't have a choice about the things that made her notable; this is a case where someone has intentionally sought notability and has had to suffer the consequences of living life that way. Having your identity known widely can be one of the prices of that, and it isn't our place to be unnecessarily sympathetic towards peoples' problems at the expense of the usefulness of the project. Celarnor 06:25, 23 July 2008 (UTC)

    You're right people make choices and have to live with the consequences. If someone chooses a career and tries to hide their name but it comes out in multiple reliable secondary sources, then so be it. But the question is, should we at[REDACTED] be spreading information that isn't already widely available? The answer IMHO is no. And actually I for one don't care whether they are porn actors, scientists or internet celebrities. It is not our job to dig out information from primary sources and tell the world because information wants to be free (or whatever). It does get a little more complicated when we have a person who has been widely covered but who's name is only sourced to one albeit reliable secondary source and I won't discuss this sort of case for now. And definitely if the information is widely covered in secondary sources, then I would have no problem with the information being included, whatever the wishes of the subject. But using primary sources to uncover information not already cited in secondary sources reaks of OR and a privacy violation to me. P.S. I agree the Genie case, which I argued against inclusion of the real name is different in character and doesn't add much to this discussion Nil Einne (talk) 16:29, 23 July 2008 (UTC)
    How then to square that with the part of WP:BLP that says this, and especially this:
    "Caution should be applied when naming individuals who are discussed primarily in terms of a single event. When the name of a private individual has not been widely disseminated or has been intentionally concealed (such as in certain court cases), it is often preferable to omit it, especially when doing so does not result in a significant loss of context."?
    And how to square it with this, and most especially this:
    "Misplaced Pages articles that present material about living people can affect their subjects' lives. Misplaced Pages editors who deal with these articles have a responsibility to consider the legal and ethical implications of their actions when doing so. An important rule of thumb when writing biographical material about living persons is "do no harm". It is not Misplaced Pages's purpose to be sensationalist, or to be the primary vehicle for the spread of titillating claims about people's lives. BLPs must be written conservatively, with regard for the subject's privacy."? David in DC (talk) 17:34, 23 July 2008 (UTC)
    I'd much rather see something referenced by primary sources than something by secondary sources, especially with regards to things that may be controversial; using a primary source allows us to look just at the facts; not at the biases, the prose of people another layer disconnected from the facts, but just the relevant facts. Primary sources are fine for simple, descriptive claims; i.e, some presidents have made their tax returns publicly available, "This person claimed this on their taxes"; there is absolutely nothing wrong with citing a publicly-available tax return for that; I think it would be preferable to do that than to cite a secondary report on it, since we're closer to the information that way and less open to re-reporting bias, which should always be avoided. It's only a problem when you have to use synthesis to get an article out of it.
    If something is available in a database and it straight-out tells you what someone's name is with zero or near-zero doubt, then it shouldn't matter whether it's a trademark application or an article in the New York Times; they both serve the same function. Celarnor 22:33, 23 July 2008 (UTC)
    But then the database has to be reliably sourced, hasn't it? The IMDb for instance is anything but a reliable database when it comes to adult films. Wrong data and stage names on movie pages, actors incorrectly listed in films they don't appear in, wrong ID connections as well as no source given where the biographical data originates from. So why should this information be accepted when it is in fact based on the same sketchy information that is not regarded as a reliable source by Misplaced Pages standards? (Jamesbeat (talk) 09:59, 24 July 2008 (UTC))
    I don't think that using Imdb is what Celanor is talking about but I do know that there are ways of covering wiki's butt and still using IMDb and or other such sources. The question then becomes should we do so? I think that each case should be taken on its own merits. But there are others here that strongly disagree. Albion moonlight (talk) 11:01, 24 July 2008 (UTC)
    That's not what I was referring to. First, the IMDB isn't a reliable source; it accepts user-generated content. Second, it isn't a primary source. With regards to film, a primary source would be the film itself (i.e, using the film's ending credits as a source for who was in the film or something else that is very, very obvious restatement of fact). I was talking about public (read: government-maintained) databases of public information, like lists of non-profit charities, trademark applications, and the like. Celarnor 16:47, 24 July 2008 (UTC)
    Yes thats what I thought you were saying. I think your idea is a good one. Albion moonlight (talk) 00:39, 25 July 2008 (UTC)

    Dragon 695 is right in one way. We should not have a special policy for porn stars. WP should not reveal the real names of any persons who use pseudonyms to conceal their identity. The pornstar case should be cited merely as an particular example of this policy.

    My proposed wording: Where a person uses a pseudonym to conceal their identity (e.g. whistleblowers, political bloggers, pornstars) then Misplaced Pages should respect their privacy and not reveal their real name. This policy even applies where the pseudonym is used to conceal criminal activity (revealing a real name in such a case is accusing that person of being a criminal - possibly slanderous). Where the real name has not been concealed or is widely known (this is a more onerous requirement than being merely verifiable) then it can be included.

    Note that most actors do not use pseudonyms to conceal their real names but for other reasons such as another actor already using that name or chosing a name that sounds more macho, more American or whatever.Filceolaire (talk) 14:11, 25 July 2008 (UTC)

    ==Talk: John Michell (writer) 91.84.204.125|91.84.204.125 was warned by 4 editors of vandalism and flame warring a month before my edit of his non-neural words like "fascist" "follower of fascistr", "admirer of Hitler", "Forty Years of Involvement with Fascism" plus collusion with a distateful editor and author. All untrue terms which I attempted to neutralize in accordance with POV and civility Wiki policies. 91.84.204.125|91.84.204.125 has called the editors of the talk page idiots. My gripe is that his facts are untrue and distorted. This user has a personal grudge against this well-regarded, highly respected living author. 91.84.204.125|91.84.204.125 has also posted threats as if he was an administrator on my User pager (see History). He blanks out his own User Talk and often refuses to sign his anonomous posts in an attempt to thwart undo. My first course of action to him was a polite note and a copy of the Wiki notice about living authors on the top of the talk page which only served to encourage his loaded terms. Thanks for your time. SageMab (talk) 00:29, 20 August 2008 (UTC)

    Section break, one more

    Once a performer gives up a pseudonym in an interview, or even writes something like an autobiography to sell in mass media ads, one could argue that there is no point in concealing the birth name on Misplaced Pages. However that is the sole exception. How many "Jenna Jamesons" with pop star status are there in porn valley? I think AIM health care tests more than 1,200 actors monthly. Sure not everyone reaches the notability to be included on Misplaced Pages (although with 300 AVN advert nominations a year many will find their article stub pop up here sooner or later) Anyway, how many of them do you think will want to get another job maybe two years later on? The long careers are pretty much a thing of the past as many rush through the biz in months. With XXX web content on the rise most production companies don't build up stars anymore. So does it have any real world consequences to have your name revealed on Misplaced Pages by some asshole best boy or webmaster who makes a copy of your passport and later adds cast lists at imdb? You bet!

    "that most actors do not use pseudonyms to conceal their real names but for other reasons" as stated by Filceolaire couldn’t be farther from reality.

    (Sorry. I wasn't clear.This sentence refers to non-porn actors, many of whom have pseudonyms. I added this sentence to my post to show that the policy I proposed would not stop us revealing that John Wayne's real name was Marion Morrison.Filceolaire (talk) 19:18, 27 July 2008 (UTC))

    There's a usually respected codex not under any circumstances to reveal the civil identity of another performer even if you are friends with. The story of a fan "who just tries to help" out Misplaced Pages by adding some alleged birth name found somewhere on the net, on any kind of blog, online forum, social network where people sign up with stolen identities etc. or even completely unsourced is just too hard to believe. In my opinion you can entirely forget about the assume good faith policy in such cases.

    Pseudonyms are used to partly escape the social stigmata any sex worker will experience, unless s/hes already a trademark in pop culture. That's just one side to this story there's another. Misplaced Pages lists many performers from European countries, and what Jkp212 said about "Actors such as these who choose to have stages names are also intentionally concealing their birth name, which they have every right to do." pretty much hits the nail in the coffin.

    Take for example France or Germany. In these countries you not only do you have a right of informational self-determination, you can even sue people over it. While every foreign language version of Misplaced Pages may have it's own set of rules the Misplaced Pages editors living in these countries can't escape their law system pointing to some "that's how we do it on Misplaced Pages" babble.

    So with the purposed policy change you not only protect Misplaced Pages but also editors in these foreign countries who won't believe they will be traced and fined until it's too late.

    The analogy with some politicians(!) public charity or tax returns used as primary sources for birth names just doesn't cut it. Limitations to this informational self-determination are allowed only in case of overriding public interest. This would be a given in case you run for major in some town, however with some regular porn star performer an European court would always let the right to conceal your identity outweigh public interest. It's pretty much a no brainer even some one without legal education should get just based on ethical values alone. This holds true for the majority of performers in the adult biz! Of course in such discussions people often cherry pick the few(!) super stars, some of which even released autobiographies featuring their real name.

    Then this notion about how Misplaced Pages does not contain telephone numbers and addresses, hence no risk for a performer to be stalked. Heck, if an anonymous editor posts something like "today Madam Kristyna Zmrznlina lives in..." some random American village" . Now how many Zrmzlinas might live there? This is not Bel Air. I think you get the idea.

    There seems to be a terrible bias among some admins in foreign wikis that it has to rain OTRS tickets before a performer gets what is basically a fundamental right.

    How about whoever adds a real name to porn stars biography gets banned immediately? No I'm serious, I mean such a zero tolerance policy would be way simpler than trying to explain most porn fans how to balance private interests versus public interests. To handle such thing on a case-by-case basis binds unnecessary human resources and frankly most editors don't have what it takes to make such decisions on a level a real world judge would do it in a court.

    and even in the few(!) cases where the birth name has been sourced with consent by the talent in question (e.g. autobiograhpy, interview) it wouldn't affect the article quality in my eyes.

    "My own guideline would be to merely look and see if Answers.com gives there real name" Albion moonlight

    As stated above answers.com is just one of many commercialized mirrors of Misplaced Pages. They just seem to have some time delay on the updates, and sometimes articles are editorially edited, most often not. Before making your own guideline try to think about where your freedom to make any such guideline ends. It sounds easy but it ain't, since we're not just talking sources here but personality rights. You might be able to generate thousands of Google hits for some source and it's worth nothing if you infringe the personality rights of a performer. In worst case scenario they might engage a lawyer and rightfully shred you to pieces.

    " I would argue that they are no more threatened than Marilyn Manson" Dragon695

    Marilyn Manson is a world famous rock star, he doesn't need to work anymore, it's nothing like the plain Jane 30 year old ex performer who just ended her valley career in favor for a little family. The word pornSTAR is pretty much misleading, they don't play in the same league, it's not even the same sport dude ;)

    Who pays for the kids to visit a private school just because some clown thought it was a good idea to publicly spread real names of their parents via Misplaced Pages?

    NEVER reveal any real names of adult actors unless they have disclosed these names themselves in autobiographies, interviews or other activities outside porn they became notable for.

    So once again:

    Everyone has a right of informational self-determination, in many European countries this is written law.
    Limitations to this informational self-determination are allowed only in case of overriding public interest. For example a porn actor becoming a politician (think Ilona Staller) or some mega success outside the biz (like pulling a Hilton, as you can't have it both ways) or releasing an autobiography and cruising through talk shows in mass media, or becoming a mainstream actor using your real name.
    The majority of porn actors uses stage names for the sole reason to conceal their civil identity, this should be reflected by the policy change. Further all references to birth names have to be wiped from the article history as well as all entry fields in the adult actors info box. Consistently all links to databases using unverified user submitted information which might infringe personality rights of the articles subject have to be removed too.

    It makes no sense to remove a name from the article and then backlink to it later on. Just as an aside there have been cases where even mainstream Hollywood actors have fought with imdb, however it goes without saying that most people in porn just can not afford such legal battles. My advices for adult actors is to enter a wrong name at imdb yourself. Sooner or later some creepy fan will import such names to Misplaced Pages anyway. Pretty much the same goes for birth dates...

    One of the worst arguments brought up is "they" can't stop anyone from finding whatever questionable source was used to put in a birth name first place. It just doesn't matter, since Misplaced Pages is one primary source of information for many people and it's content is copied in hundreds of smaller special interest databases all over the internet. So there definitely is a reason for some one who wants to conceal an identity to remove any such data from Misplaced Pages.

    In borderline cases, the rule of thumb should be "do no harm", so now act accordingly and act consequent. A little note for European performers: You should get that you don't live at the mercy of some honorable OTRS helpers, in many European countries it's entirely possible to take Misplaced Pages down with a preliminary injunction, until Misplaced Pages starts to protect personality rights with some special peer group of members (a legal education background would be great) that can react to such edits in time.

    If such a thing can not be organized Misplaced Pages will have to adapt, like freezing all biographies and let every edit by an anyonymous editor be watched over by some other experienced editor BEFORE becoming visible in the article or the article history, by treating biographies on living persons like that, such articles would loose the possibility to be updated in real time in favor for protecting the personality rights of the subject.

    For this idea to become reality it would only need a small change to the review system which gets currently tested on the German language Misplaced Pages. Those of you regulary patrolling porn star bios for vandalism might even agree with me that such a thing could save them huge amounts of time. Mean-spirited people would loose interest in adding crap to biographies real quick with such a system in place.

    In the overwhelming majority of cases you will not be able to source that a name has been released with consent of the subject in question. Why is this consent important at all? You can derive that from the right of informational self-determination which preempts and limits the rights of any public interest group. As to why a porn star has to be treated much differently from some mainstream actor living a sheltered, bodyguarded Hollywood media life should be obvious. Such persons get listed in the credits of blockbusters with their real name. Whenever Hollywood stars would decline to get credited with their real name and sign the contracts accordingly from the very start of their professional career, they had to be treated in the same way as porn stars on Misplaced Pages.

    That holds also true in the Savanna Samson case brought up by Tabercil, where there was an article in the NYT featuring her birth name. There is no "the cat is out of the bag thing", if the NYT would publish a name without consent they would be liable. Get a decent lawyer and you could be looking at big $$$.

    Conclusion: Although I much favor a zero tolerance policy I could live with what was purposed above. But you absolutely need to change this "other activities outside porn" sentence to something like "other activities outside porn they became notable with" to make any sense at all. Otherwise you might get adds in the likes of Madam X ranked second in the ice skating finals in junior high, her real name is blah blah and she entered porn in...

    "There is no real benefit in publishing the names and no significant loss of context in not doing so" Jamesbeat Exactly. Of course there is a real benefit in NOT publishing the birth names of adult performers, apart from the fact that such a decision should be left to the performer first place and this fundamental right of informational self-determination is protected in many countries ;)

    "Responsible editorial discretion is not censorship. WP:BLP is a more restrictive policy than many other institutions follow. It's one we should be rightly" proud of. We should enforce it against indiscriminate, ill-advised, mean-spirited or careless editors."

    David in DC

    Now this is something I can truly rally behind. xoxo 3vil-Lyn (talk) 18:35, 27 July 2008 (UTC)

    Whoo-boy, this is the most cogent and thorough treatment of this topic I have seen and it warms my heart. I hope it becomes the basis for real, consistently enforced, definitive policy on this topic. (Except that quote from that David in DC guy. He sometimes comes across as awfully self-righteous.) David in DC (talk) 15:43, 28 July 2008 (UTC)
    Aww, *blush* thank you so much for starting my morning off with a laugh! :)
    I'm no native English speaker, but I do hope I could give those of you who struggle to find some arguments to bring what common sense should tell you in line with the Misplaced Pages policies a helping hand - either legally or ethically. I think it can't hurt the wiki-community to take a look at those European countries with some of the more advanced privacy and publicity right laws. We can learn something from it by trying to understand their intention and looking at the long history of OTRS tickets on porn star bios.
    I am convinced that ultimately the pornography portal would gain from such a strict enforcement on porn stars biographies when it comes to birth names and vandalism. Once news about such a policy change goes out, some actors might even be less hesitant to supply pictures of themselves ;)
    C'mon every talent really interested in having their picture on Misplaced Pages could supply one, it doesn't come as a surprise almost no one wants to do it when anonymous posters are allowed to use their namespace as a piece of jotting paper for their mental blackouts and you can be almost sure some so-called fan adds a birth name every month to update the article history no matter the endless efforts of the guys currently trying to enforce WP:BLP. Let's put an end to this. Give names only with sourced consent of the actor unless the real name was used with notable activities outside porn, just like we do it for copyright stuff on Commons.
    We should also establish a flagged revision editing system on biographies of living persons just like it's done on the German Misplaced Pages, maybe with a twist that is no publication without oversight of an experienced editor (registered user with an X amount of edits, who's account is then responsible for the approval, that should put an end to anonymous WP:BLP violations). As for a nicer wording I'd humbly like to request the help of a native English speaker. ;) 3vil-Lyn (talk) 00:59, 30 July 2008 (UTC)

    Proposal for a vote

    There appear to be two views here. One that porn stars' real names can and should be added to all articles, the other that they should not be added except in specific circumstances.

    I am of the second opinion, however I believe this is a particular case of a more general issue and I believe we should draft a policy for the general issue of when to reveal the real name of a person notable under a pseudonym.

    My proposal is to add the following section to the BLP page, after the Well known public figure section and before the People who are relatively unknown section.

    It should read as follows:

    Pseudonyms

    Where a person uses a pseudonym to conceal his or her identity (e.g. whistleblowers, political bloggers, pornstars) then Misplaced Pages should respect privacy and not reveal the real name. This policy even applies where the pseudonym is used to conceal criminal activity (revealing a real name in such a case is accusing that person of being a criminal — possibly libellous). Where the real name has not been concealed or is widely known (this is a more onerous requirement than being merely verifiable) then it can be included where it will add to an article.Filceolaire (talk) 19:18, 27 July 2008 (UTC)

    • Oppose on the grounds that all WP material must be wp:verifiable, so the person's real name is actually on the public record already. If the WP editor could find it, then so could anybody else. Also, generally, it is unwise to stifle information. As an aside, the definition could be edited to be more accurate — e.g., his or her identity, not their identity, and libelous, not slanderous. Yours in rather spirited defense of freely available information, GeorgeLouis (talk) 05:08, 28 July 2008 (UTC)
    Edited to incorporate these changes. Thanks. Filceolaire (talk) 09:30, 28 July 2008 (UTC)
    • Comment This provision is already covered by verifiability and BLP, since any "outing" would have to be sourced to strong reliable sources, in which case the person has been outed anyway. I don't think it hurts to emphasize that compromising BLP information must be extremely well sourced, but I can see some being concerned about instruction creep. --Gimme danger (talk) 06:52, 28 July 2008 (UTC)
    The issue arose where WP editors were getting real names from minor blogs and from legal documents (such as age declarations and trademark registrations) to out pornstars real names. This change to BLP would make it clear that even if the person has been outed before on some obscure source that does not make it appropriate to out them on WP.Filceolaire (talk) 09:30, 28 July 2008 (UTC)\
    Those editors were blatantly violating reliable source standards for BLPs and conducting original research then. The issue of using legal documents is a good point. Perhaps a statement indicating that compromising information, such as true identity, may not be tied to original sources, but instead must appear in a reliable, synthetic source like a magazine or newspaper. Misplaced Pages editors should leave the investigative journalism to the professionals. Gimme danger (talk) 14:13, 28 July 2008 (UTC)
    • Oppose... respecting their privacy should not be our concern. The only thing that should concern us is that it has been reported in a reliable, verifiable source. Perhaps the wording in WP:V, WP:RS, and WP:BLP needs to be strengthened in that respect, however the fundamental problem is inevitable. People think "ZOMG1!1 I can edit this, guess what I just heard... everyone needs to hear this." What needs to happen, in my opinion, is more of a strict application of current policy in excising information that cannot be reliably sourced. Maybe add a section to WP:BLP stating that a person's connection to their pseudonym needs an inline reliable source, and it should be removed without one (as opposed to adding {{fact}} to it). --Storkk (talk) 10:00, 28 July 2008 (UTC)
    • Oppose - If their real name can be verified by strong independent sources (not forums and blogs) and is already publicly known then it should be added. However, if they are only notable under their pseudonym and their real name cannot be verified then it should not be added. Ғїяеѕкатея 12:33, 28 July 2008 (UTC)
    • Extremely strong oppose - If information can be verified, it should be included. Misplaced Pages is not a PR agency. We need to drop this self-important sense of being mighty gate-keepers of knowledge and only letting the little people know what it is appropriate for the little people to know. If it can be verified, it can be included! We're certainly not "outing" anyone if the information has already appeared in something we consider a reliable source. How is it even possible to make that argument? We are an encyclopedia, not a private security service. Mr. IP Defender of Open Editing 01:36, 30 July 2008 (UTC)

    Hello Filceolaire :) Let me say, first, that I do like your idea of a more general approach, however I'm afraid your wording in the second part ("Where the real name has not been concealed or is widely known then it can be included where it will add to an article") doesn't help much, it might make things even worse. Look, you at no point have the right to make such a decision for a perfomer.

    Not you, not Jimmy Wales ;), not even a hundred Misplaced Pages editors who might vote here can decide about whether or not a certain adult actors privacy rights should be abrogated.

    Just look at Katja Kassin's case, some German admin made a Google search and said voilà a thousand hits for her birth name, so it's widely known and the name should be restored. What this particular editor overlooked was that he never was in the position to decide such matters according to the law of his country. Apart from the fact that neither IMDb nor any of the other fan databases are reputable sources and a birth name often adds nothing to a porn stars biography at all, since they are usually not known by their birth names.

    What some people try to do here is transfer the privacy right of an individual to the community, that won't fly with me ;)

    It doesn't matter whether a name has been concealed somewhere nor if it's widely known according to Google or similar search engines (anyone can spread such a thing all over the internet in no time - in hours even) given that Misplaced Pages is one primary source of information for many people.

    The one thing that does matter is whether or not a birth name has been spread with the permission of the adult actor and that's about it. (as long as the birth name wasn't used in other notable activities outside the porn industry, as you can't have it both ways, see, e.g. Sibel Kekilli).

    So even if the New York Times or any other paper or online zine for that matter would publish such a name without permission and the case goes to court, Misplaced Pages would not be allowed to cite the source as soon as it becomes clear that the name wasn't cleared. To prevent any such scenario right from the start it would be best to have a zero tolerance policy on porn star bios and work on the proposed changes to the Misplaced Pages editing system. Such a special treatment to biographies of living persons would make sense anyway, whenever dealing with articles at high risk of vandalism (porn stars, politicians during a campaign,...).

    I do get a feeling though that article histories and back links to birth names are deliberately neglected all across the Misplaced Pages project (no matter the language), as if some people would think the actors are somewhat not technical savvy enough to realize how they are taken for a fool.

    So to push this policy change, ALL article histories (including discussion sites) which contained birth names at some point of their revision history that got removed due to WP:BLP or OTRS tickets, should be flagged and then wiped by a bot. Same goes for the birth name field in the adult actors template. The links to filmographies should be checked on a case-by-case basis, sometimes people try to include birth names as pseudonyms. You could even organize a team in the pornography portal that flags articles. 3vil-Lyn (talk) 13:08, 28 July 2008 (UTC)

    Absolutely not. There has been enough creep in BLP. BLP is intended to prevent unverifiable or poorly sourced information from going into BLPs. This is a good goal. This should be its only goal. It should not, ever, be used to suppress information which is verifiable from reliable sources. That's an editorial decision to be made on an article-by-article basis. BLP is a powerful tool. It needs to be strictly limited in scope and under no circumstances allowed to expand. Considerations of "privacy" and the like, when information can be verified through reliable sources, should be considered article-by-article. Legal concerns should be addressed by this guy here, not by armchair lawyers. And BLP should stay within scope. Period. It may not be our job to "out", but it is similarly not our job to "preserve privacy" of information already available in reliable sources. The very concept is almost laughable, how could one preserve the privacy of information already available to the public? And if unsourced or poorly sourced, BLP already covers immediate removal. Seraphimblade 05:25, 30 July 2008 (UTC)
    • Comment - why vote for something that doesn't reflect anything from the discussion above? - first read up on the discussion before posting a one liner in here
    • Comment That was a rather rude comment. I read enough of it to know that I completely reject the notion of "consent" when it comes to the publication of people's real names. The fact that Misplaced Pages fails to publish real names in certain cases (a la Star Wars Kid) in the name of sensitivity undermines its credibility. Admittedly, there are bigger fish to fry first, but that's a separate matter. Jclemens (talk) 00:51, 31 July 2008 (UTC)
    Oh, I didn't meant to be rude, in fact this sentence was there before I even read your post. ;) I thought a moment about moving your post under mine, but decided against it because I was too lazy. I'm still not really fond of polling before there is at least some kind of stub with the input of as many as possible editors that joined the discussion. Voting like I've seen it on Misplaced Pages often attracts people with blanket statements and discourages consensus between those who value arguments. -- 3vil-Lyn (talk) 04:58, 31 July 2008 (UTC)

    Guys! You can still cite reliable sources to include a birth name where consent is implied. A published autobiography? A publication in the NYT and no one complaining -> consent implied. No biggy.

    But a TV reportage coverage immediately followed up by a verified OTRS ticket? -> NO consent, name has to be removed by LAW in many European countries and (at least) by ethics in the States on the grounds of Misplaced Pages's own "do no harm" policy. Responsibility is a keyword here for any OTRS helper, as Misplaced Pages demands little or no responsibility from those who are given the power of publishing information on perhaps the world's largest reference source. To dismiss any calls for responsibility and restraint as censorship or solely focus on a publication though there is a justified objection from the subject in question doesn't do biographies of living people justice. Most large publications (just don't count private TV stations in here) are restrained by journalistic codes of ethics in addition to legal advisers. I fail to see how this one guy has any influence on some anonymous editor messing up article histories of porn stars with unsourced stuff. We should work on a policy that doesn't rely on complaints (by the way the complaint email address is really well hidden from a casual Misplaced Pages visitor who has no starting point).

    "The very concept is almost laughable, how could one preserve the privacy of information already available to the public?" Seraphimblade

    As stated above Misplaced Pages content is automatically spread all over the internet, therefore it's perfectly reasonable (but not nice! should be the last resort) to enjoin Misplaced Pages from including personal data that infringes personal rights of an actor.

    To give you an (rather simplified) example. Say an European newspaper publishes a birth name without consent and some judge issues an injunction to prohibt the newspaper to publish the name on their online websites or print media because it might infringe personal rights of the complainant.(there is also a possibility for monetary compensations in some countries but such things are usually taken care of later on due to exigent circumstances)

    Let's say a fellow Wikipedian has cited the accused newspaper as source for the birth name of the actor in question, so that e.g. the German language Misplaced Pages also gets a notice of distringas. Would the involved Misplaced Pages editors now say "we don't care - yadda yadda" and not comply with the request, then the German language Misplaced Pages servers in Europe would be cut off with an injunction. Such things already happened in the past. You can read about it here. Misplaced Pages.de access gone for a whole country just because of one "possible" privacy right violation. So you can see how they take these rights serious and this poor guy was already dead. A postmortem personality right. Nifty :) While it still might be possible to visit Misplaced Pages under a different domain, this wouldn't help someone who uses the leaked name in some other publication in this country nor would it help the persons who added or restored the private data as they would be legally liable.

    Seraphimblade, in my previous posts I've tried to address a lot more than just BLP issues, but of course it's entirely up to you how much time you spent to read up on the discussion.

    Nevertheless, according to your own logic, you might want to explain us on which grounds birth names that have been identified as unsourced BLP violations should be kept in the article's history rather then being flagged for a bot?

    As for creep? in BLP, one could summarize my proposal regarding porn stars in one or two sentences (just not not the argumentation). However this might not be the best place to propose the introduction of flagged revisions, as we're still on the BLP noticeboard, and such a change would be quite substantial. I do admit, though, that I have no idea where to go with the later proposal.

    By the way, one thing you learn pretty early at law school :P is that even if for example a "right of public interest" is argued, every right is limited when it infringes upon the rights of others, as there are no absolute rights. At Misplaced Pages we have no "laws" but we use policies. However we do follow the same principle, as every policy established by consent might find it's limits in other policies that we then weigh against each other. Of course every foreign language Wiki tries to not act against the law of it's country though some editors fall for the trap of privileging wiki-norms over real-norms. Don't.

    Here we often find a conflict between personality rights versus public interest, and aside from WP:BLP also WP:HARM. In my humble opinion the complications an adult actor or their families might experience with stalkers or even finding a future job outside porn, clearly outweigh any information gain a real name has to an adult actors article. Luckily in most European countries we don't need this discussion at all as people have a right of informational self-determination and it is enforced. Thanks to the insight and intellectual rigor of many OTRS helpers in most cases NOT by order of a court. ;)

    With my proposed (need work!) changes no one would have fun adding WP:BLP violations anymore as they either never appear (editorially-reviewed articles) or get wiped from the articles history anyway (preferably by a bot once an article gets flagged, just like we do it with pictures). -- 3vil-Lyn (talk) 00:13, 31 July 2008 (UTC)

    So you think Misplaced Pages should favor the possible future reputation of porn stars ahead of telling reliably-sourced truth? You might want to go reread WP:5 and go find a project which has core values more in line with your goals. Jclemens (talk) 00:51, 31 July 2008 (UTC)
    • Oppose We don't need to set a precedent of imposing 'consent' determination steps on BLPs. It isn't our job to out anyone, but it isn't our job to protect people from the internet, either. BLP means keep defamatory material off and nn-bios OUT. It does not mean roll back the clock to a point where pseudoynms obscured identity from all but the most determined searchers. The information will be concatenated somewhere. We can't stop that. We should not author a policy that makes us act as though that transparency doesn't exist. (Oh, and for the eventual comment that A: votes don't substitute for discussion or B: I'm just doing a drive by I have two things to say. Enough discussion has occured that it won't hurt to get a straw poll and just because I haven't opened my mouth above doesn't mean I haven't read it). Protonk (talk) 00:27, 2 August 2008 (UTC)
    • Oppose Fortunately consensus will never be reached on this matter and Misplaced Pages will remain an experimental encyclopedia that anyone can edit.

    Albion moonlight (talk) 12:27, 2 August 2008 (UTC)

    • Huh? It take then that this prior post is no longer operative:

    So go ahead and delete them where you find them and lets see what the rest of wiki has to say about it. I can live with a wiki that disallows all mention of a pornstars real names. But for some reason some of you seem unwilling to live with a[REDACTED] that does allow it. Anyway I am through with this discussion because it only seems to be going in circles. I assure you that I will not edit war with you or encourage others to do so. If one of those articles goes to an Rfc or to mediation or even arbitration I may join in. But as for this discussion if I am the only one blocking consensus (and I am one of 3 or 4], I hereby withdraw my dissent and agree to disagree. Best wishes to everyone.: Albion moonlight (talk) 07:51, 29 June 2008 (UTC)

    David in DC (talk) 17:49, 2 August 2008 (UTC)

    • Reply. No David my offer still stands. If I am the only one blocking consensus then I will agree to disagree and thus allow the vast majority to have there way. This offer was and is a rhetorical gesture in the sense that such a consensus is highly unlikely. I do intend to participate in the discussion from time to time and vote in these proposals but I do not value my opinions enough to block consensus over them. Be well. Albion moonlight (talk) 10:51, 3 August 2008 (UTC)
    • Oppose Personality rights as granted in Europe protect the personal life of an adut model better

    than even this first proposal as worded by Filceolaire

    Since these are basically privacy rights mandated by law, they are not up to discussion for Misplaced Pages editors living in Europe.

    We can and should assume consent in cases where we have publications in reliable sources

    (questionable or vanity press sources do not qualify (->IMDb, fan databases)),

    consent is usually implied when citing sources like autobiograhpies, big name newspapers or verifiable interviews

    (unverifiable podcasts on low profile fan sites migt be problematic though, also material from third-party primary sources should not be used

    unless it has first been published by a reliable secondary source).

    Should a subject wish to have a birth name removed and a complaint is received, we will comply following the "do no harm" policy

    (see, e.g. -> Katja Kassin, Katsuni, Brandy Alexandre, even Star Wars kid)

    as long as it can't be sourced that the subject in question voluntarily used a birth name in other notable projects outside porn.

    (-> Sibel Kekilli, Ilona Staller, Michaela Schaffrath) -- 3vil-Lyn (talk) 13:24, 2 August 2008 (UTC)

    • Oppose. Whether or not the legal names of pseudonymous actors should be included in their biographies has to be based on a better standard than whether their work is "pornographic" or not. That's obviously a matter of moral and artistic judgment that no editors should be making. To set up these special rules for pornstars gives them privacy protection that isn't being automatically offered to others. What about writers, for instance? Some authors may publish under pen-names because they don't want to be mistaken for someone else or because they want a sexier-sounding name, but most do it solely to conceal their identity. Their reasons for not wanting to be identified as the author of a particular work may be very real and every bit as personally important as those of any pornstar. The same could be true of artists (e.g. Banksy), political activists, musicians or anyone else who chooses to assume an alternate public identity. We can't make assumptions about the person's reasons for using a pseudonym, how much money they make, nor what the consequences might be of including their birth name or not. Editors' squeamishness about the porn business has already already led to a lot of what Jenny rightly calls "weasel words". For example, Ryan Idol has Idol describes himself as "the creation of Marc Anthony Donais." Apart from being embarrassingly coy, this is a smokescreen that wouldn't be offered to a non-porn celebrity like Kid Rock. The policy has to be consistent for all BLPs, and obviously never identifying a pseudonymous person under any circumstances isn't going to make the encyclopedia more useful to its readers. The only policy that can be consistently applied as a guide here is WP:RS– if a person has been identified by a reliable source, then that name is public information about them which shouldn't be denied from Misplaced Pages on the basis of an editor's moral judgment. --Proptology (talk) 03:23, 4 August 2008 (UTC)
    Comment I think you're missing the point of the Ryan Idol wording. Comparing it to Kid Rock is fairly pointless. In Marc Anthony Donais's opinion, Ryan Idol is a character he created and plays. Ryan Idol is therefore not a pseudonym but the name of a character. I see no reason to presume this is because Marc is somehow embarassed by his creation or wishes to distance himself from the character, it's simply the way he has chosen to potray Ryan Idol. One excellent example of this is Dame Edna Everage. I don't think anyone is going to resonably suggest Barry Humphries is embarassed by Dame Edna Everage. However Edna is clearly intended to be a character rather then a pseudonym of Barry and confusing the two makes absolutely no sense. It's as silly as calling Lord British in the Ultima universe a pseudonym of Richard Garriot. Or heck evem Princess Leia Organa as a pseudonym of Carrie Fisher Nil Einne (talk) 06:13, 4 August 2008 (UTC)
    No, I don't think I'm missing the point of the Ryan Idol wording, and trying to argue that black is white doesn't change anything. We all understand the difference between an on-screen character (eg. Brenda Walsh), an actor's pseudonym (eg. Woody Allen and a stage persona (eg. Larry "Bud" Melman). But it doesn't matter because all of their WP bios list their birth names anyway, while Idol's does not. --Proptology (talk) 02:51, 6 August 2008 (UTC)
    Than you for proving my point. Ryan Idol is considered an, as you say, on-screen character or persona. Therefore the article is worded appropriately. And his article also mentions the name of the person who plays that character/persona "Marc Anthony Donais. So really, I have no idea what your complaining about Nil Einne (talk) 08:57, 27 September 2008 (UTC)
    • Oppose The birth name of a notable public figure is considered encyclopedic information and is included in traditional encyclopedias' biographies, and it is equally encyclopedic in Misplaced Pages. Someone who launches a career as a movie actor is inherently seeking to be a public figure, and their life story (where and when born, birth name, education, life experiences) are as relevant to their story as those of Marilyn Monroe being born as "Norma Jean" was when she was alive. But any information about a living person must be verifiable via reliable sources. A blog generally does not qualify and IMDB does not qualify. Misplaced Pages is not an "outing" site to make public that which is not easily obtainable public knowledge. If the actor's birth name is published in Newsweek or the New York Times, it is readily available public knowledge, and no one can undo the ringing of the bell. It should be added to the article, unless there are unusual and compelling reasons not to. I can't think of any, except legal process. If someone claims to have found it from an adoption record, an obscure court document, a baptism record in a church. a real estate transaction, a property tax record, or similar records which are not widely available, and which are original research, it should not be included. We should not act as amateur private detectives, rooting out obscure information and publishing it, and we should not mirror little known blogs which do the same thing. Many such associations have been found to be incorrect, and are as dubious as much genealogical research. This falls under the "do no harm" notion, while adding a New York Times reference in fact does no harm beyond any done when the name was published there. There is no general policy of allowing the subject of an article to edit it, so as to leave in text which increases video sales or pay for appearing in films, but leave out text which includes reliably referenced biographical details in what purports to be a biography. That sounds more like a vanity biography site where people pay to have the desired biographical details published. I have questioned the notability of porn actors in several AFDs, and see many of the "bio" articles as unjustified efforts by the actors or the video producers to use Misplaced Pages as a promotional medium. If someone leaves the porn actor trade and requests deletion of their article, I would in some cases favor the deletion in AFD, unless they are truly notable as is Harry Reems. Their notability in some field outside their porn actor career seems totally irrelevant as a deciding factor for whether their birth name should be included. Edison (talk) 03:56, 15 August 2008 (UTC)
    • oppose as written Among other issues it isn't at all clear to me that all porn stars use pseudonyms to keep their real names hidden. I imagine a name like Bertha Bergensteinshwaltz just wouldn't go over well in porn (I just made that name up, I really hope no one has that name). Moreover, when a name is given in many easily accessible reliable sources there's no good reason for us to cover it up. There may be occasional situations where there is some obscure reliable source for the real name. Those cases can be dealt with in a case by case basis. JoshuaZ (talk) 18:18, 8 October 2008 (UTC)

    Can we refocus the discussion?

    • Comment I don't believe a 'vote' is helpful here and in any case the issue seems to be distracting from the original point. This discussion original arose (I believe) and definitely it was resurrected for a second time because several edits, including me, are against the use of primary sources, particularly stuff like trademark documents & unreliable secondary sources like blogs, to identify the real name of someone (for me at least, I don't care whether they are pornographic actors or politicians or whoever) when that real name has not already been published in reliable secondary sources. To me, this reeks of OR and is likely a privacy violation and therefore a violation of BLP. While I think we have consensus on the blog part, several people in particular Celarnor and Albion moonlight feel that there is nothing wrong with using primary sources of this sort ("public (read: government-maintained) databases of public information") to identify the real names of people who's real name has not yet been published in a reliable secondary source. While I appreciate what Filceolaire & 3vil-Lyn are trying to do and in fact I'm mildly supportive of the idea I've never advocated it since I've suspected and this discussion confirms that there is unlikely to be much support of the idea (in any case, I"m not sure if this is the best place to discuss a BLP policy change). I suggest we get back to the original point. Nil Einne (talk) 06:25, 4 August 2008 (UTC)
    Feel free to lead the way. I'm just here for the popcorn. and the occasional chat Albion moonlight (talk) 09:19, 4 August 2008 (UTC)
    Hi Nil and Albion. I saw this discussion link at the community portal. This says that "any material challenged should be attributed to a reliable, published source". So it seems you just need to challenge the material to cause the need for a reliable source. This talks about reliable sources and says they are "third-party published sources with a reputation for fact-checking and accuracy". The section does not list trademark documents or blogs. I think you need only (1) challenge the real name to cause a requirement for a reliable source and (2) if the source provided does not fall into this, then you should be able to keep the name out. Suntag (talk) 01:27, 5 August 2008 (UTC)

    This discussion bears directly on recent edits at Clyda Rosen and Suzy Mandel. In both cases, I deleted birth names whose only source was IMDB. My edits were reverted, with no edit summary. (At Mary Millington the same editor called my editing pointless and possible vandalism, so he/she may not have felt compelled to elaborate.) What do y'all think? David in DC (talk) 15:17, 8 August 2008 (UTC)

    I’ve answered your query regarding Millington at her talk page, but to summarize in her case there are several sources beyond the IMDB that verify both her birth and married names, there is also no sigma attached to these names being revealed in public and therefore no reason why[REDACTED] should be denied this information. The same is also true of Clyda and Suzy, and I can also elaborate on their cases if need be. --Gavcrimson (talk) 05:07, 9 August 2008 (UTC)

    Well David considering the fact that Jimbo wrote you a note your talk page to laudit your good sense and patience pursuant to this discussion. I quite honestly do not know what to think. I know that you definitely are not a vandal. Your edits are also not pointless but merely at variance with the view of many other wikipedians. Perhaps mediation is the answer. There are many wikipedians who agree with you. Albion moonlight (talk) 07:41, 9 August 2008 (UTC)
    Jimbo's note to me was reassuring. But more compelling still is his comment on his own talk page, archived here. The most significant quote, it seems to me, is this:

    ...In this particular case, I think it quite clear that the names in question should not be in Misplaced Pages. I wonder what agenda is being pushed by the desire to include them, because it's a hell of an obscure thing to fight for, for no reason..--Jimbo Wales (talk) 06:07, 5 August 2008 (UTC)

    David in DC (talk) 22:23, 11 August 2008 (UTC)

    Jimbo.s opinion holds a lot of weight with me, but his opinion does not outweigh consensus or lack of consensus until he explicitly says it does. That is to say that I will continue to vote as I choose to vote unless I am the only one blocking consensus. At that point I would remind people to go ahead and have their consensus. Consensus is very unlikely at this point but perhaps Jimbo's opinion will cause others to rethink their position . Albion moonlight (talk) 06:11, 12 August 2008 (UTC)

    http://www.nationmaster.com/encyclopedia/Clyda-Rosen A reliable source ?

    It looks like one to me, but let us hear from some of the others before I add it to the article Albion moonlight (talk) 02:08, 10 August 2008 (UTC) It has recieved laudits from The NY Times. Albion moonlight (talk) 03:04, 10 August 2008 (UTC)

    Isn't that a Misplaced Pages mirror? AniMate 03:08, 10 August 2008 (UTC)
    Yes, yes it is. From approximately this verson. Dragons flight (talk) 03:11, 10 August 2008 (UTC)

    I will take your word for it. If there is a version of it that is not a wiki mirror then perhaps it could be used. I am not going to get my hopes up on that one. I was doing a google search when I found it. Thanks for the info. Albion moonlight (talk) 06:11, 10 August 2008 (UTC)

    IMDB and Luke Ford's blog

    Suzy Mandel's article has two sources for her birth name: Luke Ford's blog and IMDb. Neither is a WP:RS. I've reverted her birth name on that basis. Even if we can't agree that intentionally obscured birth names should not be posted, surely we can agree that, if they are to be posted, they must be reliably sourced. David in DC (talk) 23:03, 12 August 2008 (UTC)

    Agreed (unsurprisingly). Any controversial claim, and revealing a birth name that has intentionally obscured is controversial, must have an excellent reliable source. AniMate 23:07, 12 August 2008 (UTC)
    And then again, what if this claim is true. It will be interesting to see how Jimbo and on the other elites handle that one. Perhaps Ms Mandell will know of a source that will satisfy eveyone. Albion moonlight (talk) 07:26, 13 August 2008 (UTC)

    Primary sources, such as trademark documents and COPPA filings, are WP:RS

    We are not here to protect the potential future of adult actors nor are we here to take a position of whether one should be ashamed of being one. They, like any other live performer, will have their real names in addition to pseudonyms if WP:RS are available. That includes official legal documentation. Period, end of discussion. As to Jimbo's question, well it is a matter of consistency and a matter of correctness. This whole thing smacks of some attempt by the forces of chastity and prudery to somehow insert their contention that it is wrong and bad to be a pornographic actor. We are not here to make such determinations, therefore we will publish the facts as best can be determined through proper sourcing. --Dragon695 (talk) 22:13, 3 September 2008 (UTC)

    Read WP:PRIMARY please. AniMate 22:18, 3 September 2008 (UTC)
    Please re-read WP:PRIMARY; especially the second set of bulleted points. There's absolutely nothing wrong wrong with taking primary sources at face value. Using a primary source as a source for the existence of itself (i.e, citing a primary source as evidence of the existence of said primary source) is a perfectly acceptable thing to do, as is using a primary source to make descriptive claims of the information found therein (i.e, "So and so filed whatever document whenever"). This isn't a sourcing issue; we can and do use this practice elsewhere for other purposes. This is a morality and privacy issue. Celarnor 23:26, 3 September 2008 (UTC)
    We are not here to reveal information that people have taken pains to conceal. This is not a judgment about someone's line of work. WP:BLP includes a presumption in favor of personal privacy when dealing with obscure facts, regardless of the reason that it has been obscured. If the only source for a personal detail, such as a person's true name, is a poorly known primary source then it should be omitted. We are writing an encyclopedia, not engaging in investigative journalism. Dragons flight (talk) 23:37, 3 September 2008 (UTC)
    Is this really an issue? Is Dragon695 really going to find the COPPA filings and enter them into an article? Likely, he will not, as he almost never actually edits articles, and tends to focus on the drama of the day according to his edit history. Secondly, if someone is actually able to obtain the COPPA filings, how can we verify that they are accurate? If the information hasn't been published in a reliable secondary source we have to take the word of a contributor that the document they have is legitimate and that isn't enough to satisfy WP:BLP. AniMate 00:09, 4 September 2008 (UTC)
    Investigative journalism is a very good description of filing FOIA's to get birth names out of COPPA filings. It is original research and it is prohibited. If you want to do that, go work for a newspaper, not as a voluteer trying to build an encyclopedia. Other, secondary and teritiary reliable sources are a necessary, but not sufficient, condition to putting something in a Misplaced Pages article. After you've gotten over the hurdles of reliability of sources and notability, you're still faced with all of the editorial judgment that must attend decisions about what details to include. That's editorial judgment, gang, not censorship. Things like WP:NOT, WP:BLP, WP:HARM, and WP:WEIGHT, to name a few.

    This whole thing smacks of some attempt by the forces of chastity and prudery to somehow insert their contention that it is wrong and bad to be a pornographic actor....--Dragon695 (talk) 22:13, 3 September 2008 (UTC)

    Way to assume good faith big guy! For the record, I'm not aligned with any forces of chastity or prudery. I am aligned, I hope, with forces of editorial discretion. Forces for adult judgment. Forces of perspective. In the face of Misplaced Pages's uncomplicated-to-understand presumption of privacy where personal data has been purposely obscured, especially in the case of biographies of living people, it must take a near-infinite personal reservoir of what Steely Dan used to call Pretzel Logic to sustain fervant crusading to out living porn actors' birth names. This next is not an original observation, but still: it's one hell of an obscure cause. What agenda fuels it? David in DC (talk) 01:00, 4 September 2008 (UTC)
    For the agenda maybe this statement might help:
    Sorry, but when you decide to be a porn star, you are relinquishing your right to hide your name. --Dragon695 (talk) 22:12, 9 June 2008 (UTC)
    Although written out of frustration this does not need further comment. But of course I still do assume good faith.
    And just for the record. A few weeks ago the German[REDACTED] has resolved the „Katja Kassin“ case mentioned above. The real name has been removed from the article as a blatant violation of WP:BLP. The name has even been deleted from the history in this particular case and the page has now been semi-protected because of repeated tries to insert the name again. (Jamesbeat (talk) 09:53, 4 September 2008 (UTC))
    It's good to hear about how this has been dealt with by our German cousins. It sounds to me like the right result. David in DC (talk) 15:24, 4 September 2008 (UTC)
    Not only is using their employment records to find birth names Original Research, it's incredibly unethical. I'm pretty sure fraudulently obtaining their 2257 for publication is also a good way to enjoy a stay at Club Fed. I don't like the idea of requiring OPRS action to resolve birth name disclosure, because[REDACTED] is used to fill in background by reporters. Usually without attribution it seems, but mistakes in articles do seem to show up elsewhere and we do put ourselves in the position of outing people by not mandating the higher standard. So far we've had driver's licenses, high school yearbooks, and falsified references used by cyberstalkers to get people's birth names into articles. Most were quickly removed but the falsified reference managed to stay in for about 8 months because nobody ever read the entire reference to find out the name wasn't there. Once we're used for background by a WP:RS, it's really hard to resolve the damage we've caused. I don't see what we lose by bumping the standard up to "widely reported" before violating people's pseudonymous privacy attempts. Horrorshowj (talk) 11:10, 15 September 2008 (UTC)
    Dragon I think your completely missing the point. I don't care whether someone is a porn star, a normal actor who plays in family films, a carpenter, a scientist, a politician or a whatever. If they are known by a pseudonym and their real name is not published in a reliable secondary sources then you should not be using primary sources to disclose that real name. Period. This has nothing to do with prudity or whatever you want to come up with but[REDACTED] policy and respect for LPs. Nil Einne (talk) 09:02, 27 September 2008 (UTC)

    Saying that living people are former terrorists

    A question under WP:BLP arises in Talk:Weatherman (organization)/Terrorism RfC regarding whether it is okay to repost in the biographies of William Ayers and Bernadine Dohrn, election-related articles pertaining to Barack Obama and the Obama-Ayers controversy, and in the Weathermen article itself, characterizations made by some that the 1960s and 1970s actions of the Weather Underground Organization constitute terrorism. This affects a number of people who are productive members of society today but who participated in radical US youth movements in the 1960s and 70s. Some feel that calling living people former terorists is a pejorative epithet that is inherently subjective (absent being on any official list) and a BLP violation; others that these people are well known and the accusations of being terrorists are well sourced (i.e. they fit the BLP exception). At the RfC there has been some question (e.g. here as to what BLP really means, so any guidance there would be helpful. Thanks, Wikidemon (talk) 18:18, 7 September 2008 (UTC)

    We wouldn't want to recklessly toss epithets as if they were mere bombs used to make a political point, would we? Edison (talk) 19:40, 12 November 2008 (UTC)

    Using the word fraudulent, and third party sources

    At Grand Orient of the United States of America there is a persistent wish to insert the word "fraudulent" about claims made by the founders about the membership of the group. It is sourced from another, personal, web page. The claim, that they have fewer members than they claim, is common and perhaps should be reported, but the way in which the word "fraudulent" is used - particularly when used about identifiable individuals - disturbs me. Could we have an opinion on this? JASpencer (talk) 16:04, 14 September 2008 (UTC)

    To give you more info, here is the situation: a noted and respected masonic appologist website (masonicinfo.com) has stated that the website of a particular breakaway Masonic group contains statements that "are extraordinarily misleading and, we believe, fraudulent". As this accusation goes directly to the notability of the breakaway group, I wish to report this opinion in the article on the group, using those same words (clearly and neutraly attributed as being the opinion of the author, in quotes and fully cited). JASpencer seems to want to remove the word "fraudulent", saying that to quote the author is a BLP violation. Please note that the article does not say that the group has committed fraud as a statement of fact... it simply quotes the author's opinion. The author has stated that he believes that the group's website contains statements that are "extraordinarily misleading" and "fraudulent". Is it wrong to quote him? Blueboar (talk) 16:21, 14 September 2008 (UTC)
    The word fraudulent is only mentioned in the original source once, and there is no explicit link with the founders. This is not the case in the original Misplaced Pages wording which did single out the founders, did mention the word fraudulent twice, including in the heading. It has toned down, by why is there such an insistence on using this term? I have no link with either side of this fight, but I find the use of this word ugly and needing a very high level of sourcing which is simply lacking. JASpencer (talk) 19:27, 14 September 2008 (UTC)
    The insistance is due to a desire to accurately quote the source. Blueboar (talk) 20:15, 14 September 2008 (UTC)
    Why has the quote changed so much from then and now? Is this bit really the most important part of the piece rather than the claim that there are very few active members? JASpencer (talk) 20:30, 14 September 2008 (UTC)
    I'm unsure if this is the right board and section for this dispute, as generally this section is for broader and more complex ongoing issues relating to several articles rather than a specific case. It's also fairly hard to get outside opinions, when disputants continue arguing rather than stating their opinions and waiting for responses. That being said... my opinion, you should file an RfC to get some more outside opinions or go to WP:3O to get a new perspective. Even better, find some reliable sources to back up the claim or refute it, as I'm frankly not sure the website necessarily holds up as reliable or notable. AniMate 20:38, 14 September 2008 (UTC)
    JAS, my most recent wording was posted to the page about 8 minutes before you took the issue to this noticeboard, here is the diff ... after that you reverted saying it had BLP issues here. Perhaps you did not notice that I changed the tone and removed any reference to the people and focused on the webpage... So let's be sure that we are discussing my most recent wording. Do you think that my most recent wording is a violation of BLP or not? Blueboar (talk) 21:00, 14 September 2008 (UTC)
    Yes, I still think that the word is insufficiently supported connsidering the implications and I am disturbed by the persistence in reinserting it. JASpencer (talk) 21:07, 14 September 2008 (UTC)

    If this is not the correct place to ask whether an article has BLP issues, would someone please point us in the correct direction? This has to be resolved. Blueboar (talk) 21:12, 14 September 2008 (UTC)

    Well, if you want more people to look at it, generally a report of this nature would go at the bottom of the noticeboard since this isn't an ongoing persistent problem. Have you filed an RfC? Have you asked for a third opinion? Have you tried finding other sources to support your claim? All steps yous should take and try to be patient. AniMate 21:22, 14 September 2008 (UTC)
    AniMate, thanks for your time and patience on this... I see from your comments at the article talk page that you cut through the issue of BLP, and address a more fundamental issue... that (masonicinfo.com) is not a reliable secondary source. This should settle the issue, if the source is not reliable then it would be improper to quote the source, and thus there is no BLP question. Blueboar (talk) 22:16, 14 September 2008 (UTC)

    Disappeared versus dead

    Harold Holt is categorised as in the mutually exclusive Category:1967 deaths (which doesn't get BLP protection) and in Category:Disappeared people (which does get BLP protection). At what point of certainty (apart from waiting until 1908 + 123 = 2031) do we consign someone from disappeared to dead? Was there another article a few months ago that faced this dilemma? Andjam (talk) 10:32, 3 December 2008 (UTC)

    templates for new editors?

    Forgive me (and point me in the right direction) if someone has done this before, have we given thought to a nicely worded welcome template for newish users who are editing BLP articles, explaining why reliable sourcing is important, and if they have any can they please add, or otherwise not add the material, with sorta nice wording like "imagine this was wirtten about you/your sister/brother etc" and highlighting the imporantce of referencing? Cheers, Casliber (talk · contribs) 02:20, 20 November 2008 (UTC)

    Individual articles

    Alexander Nooredin Latifi (closed)

    Alexander Nooredin Latifi – Article deleted – 12:00, 2 November 2007 (UTC)
    The following is an archived Biographies of living persons incident concerning the article above Please do not modify it.

    Article consists of nothing but accounts of alleged crime. Corvus cornix 22:05, 21 October 2007 (UTC)

    The allegations are from a reliable source, but is this guy otherwise notable enough for an article? --Rocksanddirt 20:39, 22 October 2007 (UTC)
    I would say no. His name gets 13 ghits, all of which are in connection to the allegations.--Sethacus 20:46, 22 October 2007 (UTC)
    I would suggest an Afd then, maybe speedy deletion?. --Rocksanddirt 23:16, 23 October 2007 (UTC)
    The above is an archived Biographies of living persons incident concerning the article above. Please do not modify it.

    Mike Huckabee (From COI/N)

    Yesterday, new editor User:Shogun108 arrived, stating his declaritive intent to clean up the article. I tried to clarify things about how we work via citation and consensus, but he was adamant that most o the stuff should be folded into 'political positions' or lost because it was negative about HuckabeeTalk:Mike_Huckabee#New_Editor_on_a_mission.. This AM, I found the following section, Talk:Mike_Huckabee#Regarding_new_editors, which explains that Shogun108 is one of a group now actively campaigning to 'fix' the article. They were solicited to fix it. One editor actively solicits peopel to become editors to game consensus: "Better yet, since edits run by consensus at Misplaced Pages, the best case scenario is for SEVERAL editors to keep the Huckabee entries honest. If only ONE editor from "here" changes things, the trolls will gather support and beat the one editor down. The rules are very loosey goosey over there. I've fought the good fight on several issues, and unless I get support, the lefties will gang up on you. " That editor's comment match this edit by User:Mactogrpaher right down to the rationale and comments on the message board. Although Shogun108's comments seem less absolutist, he is still here as an SPA whose only edits are about Huckabee, and who came here specifically to 'clean up' the Huckabee page after solicitation off-wiki. Further, mactographer's comments indicate a generally dismissive tone about WIkipedia, so it is unlikely he will actively work to conform to our standards, and again, a solicited editor. I further wonder if Mactographer's open call to flood the page doesn't count as recruiting Meat Puppets. Thanks for reviewing this. Additionally, two editors at COI/N found this report credible, as seen here Misplaced Pages:Conflict_of_interest/Noticeboard#Specific_off-wiki_campaign_to_purge_Mike_Huckabee_of_criticism.. Shogun108 is proving to be a SPA as well, please see his contribs: Special:Contributions/Shogun108. // ThuranX 20:56, 24 October 2007 (UTC)

    Just a point of caution here, these editors have not shown to be overly pushing a POV without discussion. They're participating and seem to be following the process. I only say this as it seems a couple editors have jumped in defense, without actually taking the time to read some of the debate, which creates a anti-cabal-cabal. And no such cabal as feared above has yet to surface. We need to AGF and let this process move forward, which it seems the approach here is to assume bad faith. Anyway... just think we might be jumping the gun. Morphh 2:33, 25 October 2007 (UTC)
    I would prefer this be evaluated by the BIO/N regulars, or over at AN/I, where I also posted it after nothing happened here. We've had one ridiculous vandal User:Huckabee08 alredy banned for vandalizing the pages, and would prefer some level of protection or at least acknowledgement that this represents a real concern. Morphh is dismissive of the problem, but I read that message board to be active CANVASsing off-wiki. ThuranX 20:20, 25 October 2007 (UTC)
    The agenda pushing continues; an IP tonight tried blanking a great quantity of critical material . ThuranX 05:54, 28 October 2007 (UTC)

    can we PLEASE get some help on this? today we had an IP come in, blank stuff, erase and reword other stuff to whitewash criticisms, and then changed (diff) the 'official forum' to Hucksarmy. The assault on this page by HucksArmy editors is slow but steady, and this report's been up for 11 days with NO action. ThuranX 23:41, 4 November 2007 (UTC)

    Quotes in references

    In checking the appropriateness of using large sections of "quote" in the references section of these and other articles, at the help desk and the citations talk page, I was also urged to bring the question up here, so here it is:

    I've come across an issue with another editor who simply insists on including a quote in each and every reference that he puts in. At times, these quotes can run into 2 or 3 sentences, or complete opening paragraphs/bios. This is done for even a very minor reference such as one for Ben Affleck, reference #5, Encyclopedia Titanica, or all of the references on the Dan Antonioli article. His explanation is two-fold: a) the reader needs to see the reference as it appears in situ (which makes no sense to me since to see the reference in situ requires one to go to the site to view it) and b) the citation template has a space for a quote (although the editor doesn't always use the author space, despite the author's name being available).

    My issue is that this practice is usually unnecessary as well as functioning to bulk out the page with unnecessary information in the reference section. In some cases, the references end up having an excessive amount of info in the citation yet leaves the article bereft of content. And then there is the copyright problems with it. Hoping someone has some suggestions. Wildhartlivie 03:40, 28 October 2007 (UTC)

    Conversation about this topic seems to be active at Wikipedia_talk:Citing_sources#Quotes_in_references. To avoid duplicating ideas, I'd suggest that any editors here who want to weigh in on this discussion should probably do so there. :) --Moonriddengirl 15:32, 28 October 2007 (UTC)

    On an aside, I'm pretty certain Encyclopedia Titanica does not qualify as a reliable source. Quatloo 12:17, 31 October 2007 (UTC)

    Image featuring a private person

    I can't find a policy at the intersection between WP:BLP and WP:IMAGE. What happens if a private person is featured in an image and decides that he doesn't want his face up on WP as an illustration? Does it matter if he was the one who uploaded the image (and thus relinquished all rights to it) and has now changed his mind? --BlueMoonlet 04:57, 30 October 2007 (UTC)

    The issue of "rights" isn't really an issue - he's in a public place. But the photo's of low quality and is unnecessarily duplicative of an existing, much-higher-quality photo. We have a photo of picketers with clear anti-Mormon signs - this photo is three people lined up smiling at the camera. That image says absolutely nothing - there's nothing in the photo to indicate they're attempting to convert Mormons. "Repent" could mean anything. There's no reason to antagonize the contributor for no good reason at all. We can get along just fine without the photo. I've deleted it. FCYTravis 08:00, 30 October 2007 (UTC)
    I agree with your decision, but I'm still curious about the general case. Does a person have recourse if he finds himself in a WP photo and doesn't like it? Does the answer change if he was the one who uploaded the photo? --BlueMoonlet (t/c) 14:05, 30 October 2007 (UTC)
    No, there is no legal recourse under either case. First, there is no right to privacy in a public place - anyone can take any photo of anything, publish it, redistribute it, sell it, etc. If you're out in public, you may be photographed. That is established law. Furthermore, once someone uploads and releases a photo under the GFDL, that licence is not revocable and the author may not demand that his work be taken down. However, he may ask that it be deleted, and if there's really no good reason to keep it, then removing it will avoid needlessly antagonizing the contributor without really affecting the quality of the encyclopedia. The latter is the case here, I believe. It's not really an encyclopedia photo, more of a family photo, and it doesn't tell the story as well as the existing picture. FCYTravis 15:50, 30 October 2007 (UTC)
    Makes sense to me. Thanks. --BlueMoonlet (t/c) 16:06, 30 October 2007 (UTC)
    Question - if one takes a photograph of someone in a non-public location (say, at a party, or in their house), is the photographer entitled to upload that image for use in an article? Neil  16:03, 30 October 2007 (UTC)
    He or she is certainly entitled to upload such a picture. However, a civil tort may exist if there was an expectation of privacy, and that is a separate issue. Quatloo 16:59, 30 October 2007 (UTC)
    And of course, Misplaced Pages cannot take the place of an attorney in advising you on these matters; and local laws vary from jurisdiction to jurisdiction; etc., etc..... --Orange Mike 17:13, 30 October 2007 (UTC)
    But, to my thoroughly non-expert knowledge, the general rule, at least in the US, is that if the subject knew that he or she was being photographed and consented, there is no cause of action, even if the photographer later publicizes the image in an unwanted way. If the subject didn't know he or she was being photographed (for example, a hidden camera), it gets trickier. Seraphimblade 17:39, 30 October 2007 (UTC)
    Misplaced Pages probably needs an amendment to WP:BLP covering inappropriate uses of images in articles. If I take a GFDL-licensed free image of Michael Jordan and insert it into the Nigger article, factually captioning it as nothing more than an example of a "black" person, then I have still done him some harm. Same goes if I take a person's image from Microsoft Office clip-art and widely publicize it in a campaign for/against abortion or some other hot-button issue - that person would have recourse against me for the inappropriate association of their identity, despite it being kosher from a copyright perspective. I am proposing such an amendment at talk for WP:BLP now. Reswobslc 16:41, 1 November 2007 (UTC)

    Atze Schröder

    Atze Schröder (edit | talk | history | protect | delete | links | watch | logs | views) - And here it is again, this persistent edit war that leaked in from German wikipedia. I'm sure some of you know all the details; for the others, here's a brief summary: Atze Schröder is a German comedian. The name is a pseudonym; the artist never uses his real name in public, and does not want it to be published, neither on Misplaced Pages nor in newspapers, etc. There are actually some legal proceedings around that before German courts.

    In my opinion, by WP:BLP, we should "do no harm" and not mention the name. Note that this is not a legal question, it's one of Misplaced Pages policy. Further, since the artist does not perform under his real name, the name is of little (if any) encyclopedic value.

    The real name keeps being inserted into the article at irregular intervals, by different users (anons, SPAs, but also some others). I have reverted quite a few times now, but it seems that this warrants a larger discussion. --B. Wolterding 11:00, 30 October 2007 (UTC)

      • This is a difficult one. I looked up the trade mark registration and in fact the name assumed to be the real name of the comedian is given only as the rights holder; it's simply an assumption that the rights holder is one and the same. WP:BLP#Privacy of names is however a rather nuanced policy. This clearly counts as an intentional concealment of a name but all the policy says is "it is often preferable to omit" the real name, and then says that the loss of context is the issue by which it is judged. In this case, the fight to preserve the confidentiality of the name is an issue which is relevant on both sides: it shows both intention to conceal, and that the real name is important and adds context. The Tron (hacker) issue is worth considering but the fact that the German court did find that the real name should not be disclosed is a strong factor which leads me to think that we should not have it in the article at the moment. Other people's judgments welcome.

        It might be a good idea to expand the article so that it doesn't get overladen by this issue. At present it does not give much context for people unfamiliar with Atze Schröder. Sam Blacketer 15:04, 30 October 2007 (UTC)

          • Regardless, the German court system's verdict does not apply to a server hosted in Florida. As a public figure he has no valid claim for anonymity, he's made himself public, if he wished to remain private he should have reconsidered becoming an actor. BLP very clearly does not apply in this circumstance.  ALKIVAR18:25, 30 October 2007 (UTC)
            • It's not a legal issue, but it is a moral one in which our community policy is involved. I disagree that BLP does not apply. BLP policy does cover the real names of people known by a pseudonym, and says that there are circumstances in which real names should not be given even if known. Given that we only have biographies of notable people, all biographies are of people who are not entirely 'private'. I also think there is a case for deferring to what is acceptable in the culture to which Atze Schröder belongs, and German culture is more restrictive on publishing personal information than is the US or UK. Sam Blacketer 21:56, 30 October 2007 (UTC)
        • I understand that there is a decision pending by Berlin's court of appeals whether mentioning Schroeder's real name in a newspaper was correct or not. Schroeder also sued German[REDACTED] and then withdrew the suit. The court in this case pointed out that Schroeder is not a private individual but someone clearly adressing the public and appearing publicly. Therefore he can't request being treated like a private individual. The public's interest in Schroeder is justified because Schroeder himself has sought their attention. In short: Schroeder cannot appear publicly and at the same time request anonymity. This is also valid for this article. Btw, WP:BLP#Privacy of names clearly refers to private, living indviduals whose identities might need to be protected. It is not about people in showbiz using a pseudonym. Generally the real name behind an artist's pseudonym is revealed/mentioned in related articles. See for example John Wayne (dead) or Prince (musician), Björk (living). --Catgut 17:58, 30 October 2007 (UTC)
          • The difference may be that the real names of those people have been widely published in the press and literature, while this artist's name has not been. As for the court case, I'm not a lawyer but one should note that the court in this case did not decide on whether the real name can be mentioned or not, it just decided who will bear the fees for a case that had been withdrawn. On the other hand, there was a court ruling which did decide whether it's permitted to publish the name, negatively (this is now at the appeals). Anyway: The criterion for Misplaced Pages is whether the name has been widely published, and whether it's relevant to the article. Both questions have a negative answer here, I think: Schroeder's real name has not been widely published in the press (while it has been published in a storm of blog entries, but that's an entirely different issue). As for relevance: While the controversy about the name may be relevant (maybe more to Misplaced Pages than to the artist?), the actual name is not - unless you want to contact Schroeder privately. (And I think that's what he wants to avoid.) By the way, who says that the privacy of showbiz people does not warrant protection? His name has not been "widely disseminated" in reliable sources. If he doesn't make his private life public, we shouldn't cover it. We're not a tabloid. --B. Wolterding 18:42, 30 October 2007 (UTC)

    I tagged the article as non-notable. It has no secondary sources and, as far as I can see, nothing that would be of interest to an English speaking reader. Steve Dufour 02:39, 3 November 2007 (UTC)

    David Armstrong-Jones, Viscount Linley

    Are recent edits to this page adequately sourced? Sam Blacketer 22:23, 30 October 2007 (UTC)

    People are adding and removing sources, so it is difficult to say. As it is right now the article is not adequately sourced, but the one source that is there for the most controversial piece is Reuters. There is personal information (family names) that should be removed per WP:BLP if sources are not found. Quatloo 12:14, 31 October 2007 (UTC)

    Cliff Richard bio

     Done
    I don't know how to do it myself, but somebody may like to remove the paragraph about Cliff being cryogenically frozen once a year. Quite funny, but untrue I imagine

    Richard Gibson142.179.185.10 23:59, 30 October 2007 (UTC)

    Thanks for bringing it to our attention. :) It was reverted by User:Jwy. --Moonriddengirl 12:25, 31 October 2007 (UTC)

    Johan Galtung

    A user is citing dodgy statments by professor Johan Galtung I have never seen. There are no publications of his either that supports the claim. The claim is that Galtung is against western democracy and freedom in general, and that he was a strong supporter of Soviet opression of European nations. They got ONE source with is a 'news' site with a heavy politcial agenda Nastykermit 18:33, 31 October 2007 (UTC)

    One of the cites -- not sure if it is to the one you refer -- is to a publication by title only. At the very least the issue should be identified in order to track down the quote(s) if necessary. I'd say WP:BLP would require a full citation, not a broad reference by title alone. You might include pointers to the edits in question. Quatloo 15:48, 1 November 2007 (UTC)

    The 'source' in question is city journal. The article author writes "and his views on World War II suggest that he’d have preferred it if the Allies had allowed Hitler to finish off the Jews and invade Britain" witch is nothing less than absurd. I also suggest that an article written by a journalist citing no sources should not be validNastykermit 18:20, 2 November 2007 (UTC)

    There is one source to a Criticism section. It is an article by Bruce Bawer, published in City Journal, and subsequently reprinted in an abridged form in the Los Angeles Times. Links to both articles are given, and I have checked the statements the editor who entered the material made: they are indeed made by Bawer in the article. User:Nastykermit is correct that Bawer does not give his primary sources. But Bawer is notable, and both City Journal and the Los Angeles Times are reputable publications. In fact, this section of the article has better sources than the rest.
    User:Nastykermit has persistently deleted this criticism section, claiming that he "knows" that it cannot be true. I have persistently restored his deletions, and suggested that he add sourced material to the article if he finds it unbalanced. We've spent several days on this, with fruitless exchanges on the talk page and revert warring. Involvement by a few more editors would probably help settle this. --Anthon.Eff 15:12, 3 November 2007 (UTC)

    Ann coulter is published in several magazines but that doesnt make her crazy ramblings any more credible. Bawer is NOT a journalist but a mere literary critic. Fact is, the burden is on YOU to verify rather me debunking it. Just by reading 'the peace rakcet' you should have the common sense to see it for what it is...trash. Spending 5 minutes on your 'source' will show just what type of site it is. It's a strongly conservative leaning site while the article is supposed to be neutral.Nastykermit 16:02, 3 November 2007 (UTC)

    I'm an outside editor that has a history with Anthon.Eff (he likes to call me name, such as "communist", regarding another issue), so I'm not entirely impartial. But I have read the comments here and the article in question. In my opinion, the article is very strongly opinion based since the author, Bruce Bawer, cites a lot of quotes that Galtung supposedly made but doesn't say where the quotes have come from. I have done a quick Google search and have not found corroborating evidence (other than people citing Bruce Bawer.) Unless there is another source that shows that Galtung has in fact stated these claims, the text clearly violates WP:BLP and is defamatory and derogatory. Until someone takes the time to find corroborating evidence, it should be removed from the article immediately. If Anthon.Eff continues to replace the derogatory text in the article, he should be reported to WP:3RR.
    I would appreciate it if someone else could also look into this as Anthon.Eff has chosen to disregard my comments. –panda 00:28, 4 November 2007 (UTC)
    By "involvement by a few more editors" I guess I didn't mean you panda, since you are clearly stalking. But heck, if no one else shows up, and you really want to participate, maybe you could start off by enlightening me where in policy you can find the support for your assertion that one needs two sources ("Unless there is another source that shows that Galtung has in fact stated these claims, the text clearly violates WP:BLP"). And just to keep this short, here is a link to what I think is the relevant policy. --Anthon.Eff 01:10, 4 November 2007 (UTC)
    Like I said, I'm not an entirely impartial person as now Anthon.Eff is accusing me of stalking, another typical bad faith accusation that I've been getting from this editor... –panda 01:28, 4 November 2007 (UTC)

    Anthon.Eff your abusive comments in the edit history speaks for themselves. You have no valid sources and are violating WP:BLPNastykermit 18:22, 4 November 2007 (UTC)

    This issue is still unresolved. I've removed the text for now, but I expect that Anthon.Eff will revert. Anyway, the text in question can be found in an older version of the article. –panda 19:57, 4 November 2007 (UTC)

    John Forester (cyclist)

    A user, Bepperson, is planning to add Original Research to this article. His choice of words in both the dicussion page and the article itself suggest he is also somewhat hostile to John Forester. >>I have replaced the two missing paragraphs that Tomasrojo vandalized by removing on October 25. I am not writing Foresters unofficial biography, I am writing his official biography. Thomasrojo no doubt removed the paragraphs because, while not pointed out in the article, the information contradicts biographical information contained in Forester's C.V. In addtion, the introduction of certain biographical chracters is necessary because I have conducted interviews with these persons and they have comments on Forester's life and career which will be added as I go along. As I have previously noted, through his career, Forester has made himself a public figure and thus his life is subject to any scrutiny that is supportable by the facts and is not libel<< Tomasrojo 11:33, 1 November 2007 (UTC)

    I have done some cleaning on this article and addressed some of its sourcing concerns with inline citations, although it needs more work, particularly beginning in the John_Forester_(cyclist)#Cycling_advocacy section, where I was when I ran out of time. :) I'll try to get to some of that later today, although I may not make it. Meanwhile, I've put the article on my watch list for the time being. If inadequately sourced material is added in the near future, I'll join you in addressing that on the talk page. --Moonriddengirl 11:55, 2 November 2007 (UTC)
    Thanks very much for doing that. I tried to clean it up in a similar fashion, but my edits were all reverted. I didn't have any citations either, so thanks a lot for those.Tomasrojo 09:55, 5 November 2007 (UTC)

    Jeremy Beadle (closed)

    Jeremy Beadle – uncited and trivial points removed – 00:01, 12 November 2007 (UTC)
    The following is an archived Biographies of living persons incident concerning the article above Please do not modify it.
    I removed these uncited, and trivial, points. Steve Dufour 02:15, 3 November 2007 (UTC)
    The above is an archived Biographies of living persons incident concerning the article above. Please do not modify it.

    José Galisteo (closed)

    José Galisteo – BLP violation material removed – 23:03, 4 November 2007 (UTC)
    The following is an archived Biographies of living persons incident concerning the article above Please do not modify it.

    José Galisteo

    Resolved

    I'm listing this here because the subject himself has emailed me, demanding we remove material saying he is gay, that he has performed at gay venues, and that he has gay fans. Every fact has a reliable source, including quotes from him himself discussing gay sex he has had and that he has never had sex with a woman (though I didn't feel it necessary to include all of this information). This is the Spanish Google, which has tons of gay content about him, a lot of it reliable sources. It has been vetted by several people, including an administrator. Still, I thought it best to list it here for review. I am massively disappointed in his reaction, since I wrote it (though in a NPOV manner) because I am such a big fan of him and his music. Jeffpw 21:53, 2 November 2007 (UTC)

    I'm not sure how reliable the sources are: they appear to be online-only publications? If so, they might not be good enough for redflag claims like this. --h2g2bob (talk) 18:41, 3 November 2007 (UTC)
    Actually, 2g2bob, Gay magazine seems to be both "real world" as well as web based, from what I can tell on their site. Anodis seems a reliable source to me, as well. They have a radio program, a podcast and their website. They also post on their site a journalism code of ethics, which includes the assertion that they have sources for all material and can provide them. The other sites are his own official fan club site, the website for Telecinco, (Spanish National Television station 5) and the blog of the program he appeared on, Operacion Triunfo (Spanish Idols, for lack of a better word. The references are not what concerned me. My concern was Galisteo making trouble for me or Misplaced Pages in spite of the sources. To be honest, coming here was sort of a CYA for me. By the way, I have given Galisteo the addy for OTRS to contact if he feels it necessary. He is also now planning to edit the article himself, if I read his last email to me correctly. Jeffpw 19:36, 3 November 2007 (UTC)
    Just being online only does not mean a source is unreliable - New Advent exists only online and is a extremely useful source for Catholic references. The sources on the article have been checked out by both English and Spanish Wikipedians, both when the article was first written and now, and there is nothing wrong with them. Jose Galisteo has made no claims to the effect that he is *not* gay, he simply doesn't want that information in the article, which is both white-washing and unacceptable. This issue is of someone wanting to hide his true self to make more money, and I for one am not going to allow him to do so at the expense of our integrity as an encyclopedia. Removing true, verifiable, and more importantly, cited facts from a BLP because the subject wishes it wasn't true is something we should never allow to happen, or we would have no content at all. And if I may say so, h2g2bob, responding to such a situation by merely slapping a garish label to the top of the article in question is unhelpful in the extreme and only pisses off the people who have devoted time and energy to getting this article right. Dev920 (Have a nice day!) 21:39, 3 November 2007 (UTC)
    I didn't find the results of the Spanish Google search very convincing. These all look like blogs or personal websites. Is the matter discussed in any newspaper accounts? If you have reliable sources, please list them explicitly here. The blogs that claim to be him surely lack all credibility and should not be kept in the article. Also, the question of whether he is gay seems to take up a large fraction of the article, which is surely disproportionate to what interest he may have as a musical performer. If he has performed in venues thought to be gay, that can be neutrally stated and some of the names of the clubs given. EdJohnston 22:27, 3 November 2007 (UTC)
    There is only one blog listed in the article, and that is from the show he was on. The rest are news magazines. Did you actually look at the article, Ed? Jeffpw 22:34, 3 November 2007 (UTC)
    One has to follow the sources. If a disproportionate number of sources discuss his sexuality rather than his work, then to take it upon ourselves to skew the article to what we consider more appropriate is worse than to just write the article and wait for the sources to balance themselves out. And I second what eff said about reading the article - merely checking Google is somewhat pointless given we didn't just pick up random crap from the front page of Google and just drop it in. May I ask if you read Spanish? Dev920 (Have a nice day!) 22:37, 3 November 2007 (UTC)
    Why did you check the Spanish Google? Why didn't you check the article and see the refs there? I assure you, we did our very best to provide reliable sources. Raystorm (¿Sí?) 22:41, 3 November 2007 (UTC) Edit conflict
    Now that I have looked at the article more carefully, I think it's getting close the point where BLP-aware administrators might just swoop in and delete it. Please be aware that this part of our policy is very seriously enforced. Either remove the improperly-sourced assertions that appear to 'out' him as gay, or consider the possibility that the article will be deleted. At a minimum, since User:Jeffpw has received an email from the subject challenging the truthfulness of the article, the assertion should be immediately removed while this discussion continues. EdJohnston 22:57, 3 November 2007 (UTC)
    It would seem not only do you not read the article, Ed, you do not read the posts here either. Jeff has never stated that Galisteo has chellenged the truth that he is gay, only that he doesn't want it on the article. The information in the article pertaining to Galisteo's sexuality has been cited from approximately five different sources - all of which are reliable. This article will not be deleted just because the subject is sexually ashamed. Please do not make empty threats just because you are using WP:BLP to do so. Dev920 (Have a nice day!) 23:05, 3 November 2007 (UTC)
    Now don';t put words in my mouth, Ed. I flat out asked him if it was libelous or untrue and he replied that it was "is not interesting and I dont want to see it there". That's not the same thing at all. He also said he doesn't want it written that he was i the military, a very innocuous statement, and sourced. Should we pull that, too, because he doesn't like it? Now, I have asked User:SandyGeorgia to look at it, and s/he has said that will happen tonight, American time. Given his/her long term work on WP:FAC and WP:FAR, I trust her implicitly to check for factual accuracy. Further, s/he speaks fluent Spanish, something you haven't said you could. I would ask you and others to wait until s/he checks it out before you "swoop down and delete it". That sounds like a real threat, to me. Jeffpw 23:06, 3 November 2007 (UTC)
    (ec x2)The subject has given interviews to a number of Spanish gay publications in which he stated that he is gay. BLP does not require a whitewash - the article has been worked on in partnership with editors of the Spanish Misplaced Pages. The sourcing is there. The fact that someone is unhappy with their biography does not make it incompatible with BLP. As a matter of interest, how much Spanish do you speak? Even my limited knowledge of the language confirms that the sources back up the article's content. WjBscribe 23:07, 3 November 2007 (UTC)

    BLP is clear - we don't describe anyone as gay or lesbian unless they clearly self-identify as such. If he does not self-identify as gay (and his apparent retraction of his statements indicates thus), then we don't call him gay. Sexual identity is a personal matter which cannot be imposed upon someone.

    From WP:BLP: "Category tags regarding religious beliefs and sexual preference should not be used unless... The subject publicly self-identifies with the belief or preference in question.

    If he does not identify as gay, we don't categorize him as such. FCYTravis 23:44, 3 November 2007 (UTC)

    I just reverted you because he has not any point retracted his statements regarding being gay, which I believe is why you removed the cat. I think he would rather he hadn't said it, but it doesn't change the fact that he did. Obviously if he denies being gay this is a different matter but as I understand it from what my Spanish counterpart tells me, he has not done any such thing. Dev920 (Have a nice day!) 23:51, 3 November 2007 (UTC)
    If he does not currently self-identify as gay, we don't categorize him as such. It's that simple. The policy is black and white. Category tags should not be used unless the subject publicly self-identifies. He is not publicly self-identifying. We can and should discuss whether or not he is in the article, and the controversy over his statements, but we cannot use those categories. FCYTravis 23:54, 3 November 2007 (UTC)
    I think that would be pushing BLP to an extreme it was never intended to cover. If someone decides to give interviews to one segment of the media claiming X and to other claiming Y, that is something that should be related if a NPOV article is to be created. There are clear sources where the subject has self-described himself as gay - that's something our article is going to need to address. We have recieved no corresponce that has claimed the article is unture, only that that someone claiming to be the subject wishes it said something else. There has been no OTRS contact - where we could at least confirm who we are dealing with and request clarification of the material points. WjBscribe 23:56, 3 November 2007 (UTC)
    Nobody is suggesting that the matter should not be covered in the article as a controversy. We certainly should include the public debate, speculation and conflicting reports on his sexuality, to a limited extent so that they do not overwhelm the rest of the biography. But we cannot categorize him as gay or bisexual unless he has made a clear, unretracted and undisputed statement that he is gay or bisexual. A category is black and white and cannot be applied to situations which are in shades of gray, as this one is. We don't have a category called "Might be gay depending on which interview you read this week." FCYTravis 00:02, 4 November 2007 (UTC)
    I apologize for not reading the cited sources carefully enough before my previous comment, and I went overboard calling it a serious violation. Nonetheless, I'm still puzzled by how important this should be considered in such a short article, and outing somebody who writes to Misplaced Pages and asks for it not to be mentioned (for whatever reason, even if slightly hypocritical) seems unnecessary. The fact that he performs in gay clubs is still germane and can be mentioned with no problems. EdJohnston 00:14, 4 November 2007 (UTC)
    That still presumes the email writer is Jose and not some fan aggrieved by the tone of the article. The categories may not be justified if there has been a public retraction, but the controversy from making strikingly different claims in different media seems someothing that can be validly covered. WjBscribe 00:19, 4 November 2007 (UTC)

    I'm just now getting around to looking at this, having read all of your posts at AN/I and here at BLP. If I'm understanding correctly, there are several issues here wrt how we interpret BLP, but the question is coming down to how reliable are the sources that identify him as gay; more specifically, according to BLP, does he self-identify as gay in any reliable sources? Is that a correct summary of what I'm looking for? SandyGeorgia (Talk) 00:14, 4 November 2007 (UTC)

    Yes, Sandy, that's a correct summary. I ran the articles through Babelfish, and got a general sense of them, and then went to Spanish members to translate for me. After they read the paragraph they told me the refs supported it, and helped me to find the right articles for each assertion. From what I heard from the other members, and from my own translation (not only of the articles but also the site's background), I came to the conclusion that the refs were reliable enough for a BLP article. It was a collaboration, but I am ultimately responsible for the content and refs. Jeffpw 00:22, 4 November 2007 (UTC)
    Sorry, I approach an article kind of linearly ... hard to read it until I clean up the minor MOS stuff :-)
    The first source, José Galisteo en el Festival Europride´07 is published by a bank, Banco Bilbao Vizcaya Argentaria S.A., and appears to be mostly a gimmicky page for generating revenues. If you trace back to their main page, you'll find a tiny pop-up at the very top of the page, under Aviso legal. The wording there does not inspire confidence as to WP:RS:
    • (a) La información facilitada por BBVA debe ser considerada por el usuario a modo de introducción, sin que pueda estimarse como elemento determinante para la toma de decisiones, declinando el Banco toda responsabilidad por el uso que pueda verificarse de la misma en tal sentido, y de forma específica ha de entenderse que dicha información, sometida a la normativa vigente en España, no va destinada a aquellos usuarios que actúen bajo otras jurisdicciones de Estados que exijan el cumplimiento de requisitos distintos para la puesta a disposición, divulgación o publicidad de servicios y/o productos financieros.
    • (d) BBVA no responde de la veracidad, integridad o actualización de las informaciones que no sean de elaboración propia y de las que se indique otra fuente, así como tampoco de las contenidas en otros websites mediante hiperenlace o vínculo desde www.bluejoven.com, facilitados al usuario como fuentes alternativas de información, que se regirán por los términos y condiciones de utilización que a tal efecto resulten exigibles por los titulares de dichos sitios web, por lo que BBVA no asume responsabilidad alguna en cuanto a hipotéticos perjuicios que pudieran originarse por el uso de las citadas informaciones. En ningún caso, los mencionados hiperenlaces serán considerados como recomendación, patrocinio, o distribución por parte de BBVA de la información, productos y/o servicios, o, en general, contenidos de titularidad de terceros, ofrecidos por éstos o en cualquier forma por los mismos divulgados.
    It's not the kind of site I'm comfortable with, but it's not being used to cite anything controversial (so I won't translate all of that).
    On the second site (his Fansclub, which has a bio page), I could find no info to verify the antipathy to the military. I linked directly to the bio page on the site, and moved the ref to the info it verified. The military info is verified in the GayMagazine site.
    GayMagazine presents the requisite credential page, but I can't speak to their fact checking or editorial oversight. Same for ANODIS.
    oops, still digging through here, but it's not looking good. I'm going to ping Jossi, who knows BLP and who speaks Spanish, for another look. We have two sources (GayMagazine and ANODIS, La Agencia de Noticias sobre Diversidad Sexual) reporting the story.GM ANODIS But. They quote it in a way that it's not clear to me that they're quoting *him*, or if they are quoting what was found on the internet, and the place where it was found on the internet seems to be reported in blogs and not at all reliable. Fotos: Video:José Galisteo. I'm not comfortable with what I'm finding so far. It's not clear to me that they are quoting *him*, so I can't say he has self-identified. I can say it's possible it's all a blog-fueled story. If they are quoting him, the relevant quote is that at the age of 22 he's never had sex with a girl (the tias) but has with men (the tios) at 19 (first penetration). "Yo todavía soy virgen... con las mujeres... Yo nunca me he tirado a una tía. Una vez a los 22 lo intenté con una amiga, pero iba tan borracho que ni me trempé. Con los tíos mi primera vez con penetración fue a los 19 años." ANODIS and GM are reporting the same story, and their source isn't clear to me. Because of the way they write it, it is not clear to me that those words can be attributed directly to him, and the blog is dubious. The way I'm reading ANODIS, it specifically says he has *not* self-identified (rather has been forced out), but I'd like Jossi to take a look. SandyGeorgia (Talk) 01:37, 4 November 2007 (UTC)
    Sandy, I appreciate all your hard work. I have to go to bed now (2:30am here), and will return tomorrow to see what Jossi says, if s/he has replied by then. Thank you very much. Jeffpw 01:41, 4 November 2007 (UTC)
    No prob; it's not at all clear reporting to me. Also, if Jossi (or others) read the sources as I do, we may need to BLP delete "In an interview, portions of which were reprinted in the Chilean Gaymagazine, he admitted he was gay, but later claimed he was forced into saying that." I'm not clear that it's an interview, or just those magazines repeating what was found on the internet. If Jossi doesn't pop in soon, I'll ping Tito or Joelito or someone else. SandyGeorgia (Talk) 01:43, 4 November 2007 (UTC)
    One can also have sexual relations with other men, yet not self-identify as gay, just as you don't have to have sexual relations with other men to identify as gay. Thanks for doing more digging - I do not speak Spanish, unfortunately. FCYTravis 02:10, 4 November 2007 (UTC)
    I speak Spanish and will take a look at these sources. ≈ jossi ≈ (talk) 03:17, 4 November 2007 (UTC)
    I read these sources and it is clear to me that it is just speculation being voiced in these sources, which do not meet the threshold for reliability on this subject. I have removed the material in question. ≈ jossi ≈ (talk) 03:22, 4 November 2007 (UTC)

    Given that there are some editors that keep restoring the material in question, I have protected the article for 2 hours, to give others the opportunity to review the material as well. ≈ jossi ≈ (talk) 04:45, 4 November 2007 (UTC)

    Having only a limited knowledge of Spanish I'm not in a position to evaluate the sources. I agree with Sandy above that one of the key distinctions in whether the subject gave interviews to the cited publications or whether they merely quoted web content (now it seems challenged as a hoax) as if it were an interview. It really would have been better to get an uninvolved admin to protect the page though... WjBscribe 04:49, 4 November 2007 (UTC)
    Just to clarify, are the sources reliable enough to say there's been speculation about his sexuality, without labeling him as gay? -- SatyrTN (talk | contribs) 04:54, 4 November 2007 (UTC)
    I didn't see it there, but that's why I asked for another opinion. My Spanish is fluent, but I'm not a native speaker, so I was afraid I'd missed something (although my spouse, a native speaker, didn't see it either). The *way* these sources report is very shady, so I'm not sure they're reliable. I didn't see the sources clearly stating it was an interview, they hedged with how they set up the paragraphs in terms of what they were saying, and they both read as if they were passing along innuendo encountered elsewhere, without clearly specifying the source of the information. And I didn't find the same info in any reliable source. On the other hand, there was wording in ANODIS that did make it clear he had not self-identified. I'm comfortable that we did the right thing. I also searched in Spanish for some of the other phrases found in GayMagazine attributed to Galisteo, and they didn't show up. SandyGeorgia (Talk) 05:01, 4 November 2007 (UTC)

    Here is the specific reason for my concern, from GayMagazine. They provide a lot of quotes, but never say it was a direct interview. What they do say is:

    • Los rumores que terminaron sacando del closet a Galisteo dieron pie a la prensa del corazón española para indagar sobre el. Es así como se ha dado con un foro sobre rascacielos skyscrapercity.com en el que opina sobre la vida, el ambiente gay, su novio o las pruebas de selección de OT, con lo que se construye el perfil de un hombre maduro, con pareja estable; Karim de 33 años, DJ, afincado en París, preocupado por la naturaleza y aficionado a la arquitectura.

    ... which is quite wishy-washy, but it leaves the impression that they claim he is the anon poster of those quotes at skyscrapercity.com bulletin board (made five years ago). They don't establish that he made those posts, so this is the worst kind of reporting, and what Wiki should specifically avoid. On the other hand, I can see how it appeared legit to Jeffpw, because the reporting is quite vague and tricky. This is why we demand the highest quality sources on BLP. SandyGeorgia (Talk) 05:22, 4 November 2007 (UTC)

    Thanks, all, for your help! -- SatyrTN (talk | contribs) 05:48, 4 November 2007 (UTC)
    I'm kind of late to the party, but the sources are essentially hearsay. I can't find anything that says that the dude himself says he is gay. Titoxd 07:52, 4 November 2007 (UTC)
    • Though naturally I am disappointed when content I have added is removed, I am always pleased to see Misplaced Pages improved. Sandy, Jossi and all others who have participated in this review: thank you so much for helping out, and thanks for caring so much about the project. Jeffpw 08:15, 4 November 2007 (UTC)
    Well, Thank you as well from receiving feedback in a constructive manner. It is not always the case, you know? ≈ jossi ≈ (talk) 14:39, 4 November 2007 (UTC)
    The above is an archived Biographies of living persons incident concerning the article above. Please do not modify it.

    Giovanni di Stefano

    Giovanni di Stefano (edit | talk | history | protect | delete | links | watch | logs | views) which has long been a contentious article, including intense involvement by both the subject, a prominent European lawyer and Jimbo Wales, is being impacted by the actions of Privatemusings (talk · contribs · deleted contribs · logs · filter log · block user · block log), who has created an alternative article in his userspace. The problem in the past has been repeated insertion of material which casts the subject in a bad light but avoids addressing his underlying status. This material originates in the mainstream British press which, in order to avoid legal exposure, are careful to imply without specifically setting forth the implication. Faced with the prospect of litigation, Jimbo and I have been quite conservative in our editing. Privatemusings, on the other hand, an alternate account of Purple (talk · contribs · deleted contribs · logs · filter log · block user · block log) which has focused on controversial issues, is now campaigning to reinsert controversial poorly sourced information. This is a difficult matter, due to recent controversy involving an abortive block of Privatemusings, but assistance would be appreciated. Fred Bauder 14:12, 3 November 2007 (UTC)

    The article seems OK now, and devoid of material as you describe it. I will add the article on my watchlist and keep an eye on it for a few weeks. ≈ jossi ≈ (talk) 14:42, 4 November 2007 (UTC)

    Amir Abdul-Malik Ali

    User "Buster Friendly" continue to use libel and slanderous language about Amir Abdul-Malik Ali which I will inform the individual personaly. I understand there is two sides to debates and subjects, however agreement on nuetral lanquage not misrepresenting and causing libel on a person should take place, if there is any questions of possible misunderstanding they can be appeased by questions not blanket indictments. — Preceding unsigned comment added by Imhotep5 (talkcontribs) 20:49, 3 November 2007 (UTC)

    See #Amir Abdul Malik, five threads down. –panda 04:38, 6 November 2007 (UTC)

    Jessica Seinfeld (closed)

    Jessica Seinfeld – POV removed – 14:31, 7 November 2007 (UTC)
    The following is an archived Biographies of living persons incident concerning the article above Please do not modify it.

    I ran across this article today and was surprised to see a pretty lopsided POV on the cookbook thing. The account reads like someone's opinion. For example, one comment starts out "Interestingly..." and then proceeds to insinuate Seinfeld and/or Harper Collins lifted ideas from another cookbook. I think this article could use more help. . --Horoball 21:04, 3 November 2007 (UTC)

    I took out some of the worst stuff. Steve Dufour 14:47, 4 November 2007 (UTC)
    The above is an archived Biographies of living persons incident concerning the article above. Please do not modify it.

    Xi Jinping (closed)

    Xi Jinping – Deleted personal ilfe material that violates BLP, NPOV, and Verifiability; – 23:06, 4 November 2007 (UTC)
    The following is an archived Biographies of living persons incident concerning the article above Please do not modify it.

    Xi Jinping and Newsweek

    Resolved – Deleted Personal Life material that violates Wiki: BLP, NPOV, Verifiability

    I'm including this here under "other issues" -- and serious they are.

    The November 5, 2007 issue of Newsweek includes a reference to the Misplaced Pages article on Xi Jinping, who is one of the high leaders of the People's Republic of China. On page 15, Newsweek staffwriters Melinda Liu and Jonathan Ansfield wrote about Xi that one of his assets to Westerners is that he is perceived to be a "bumpkin." Liu and Ansfield then add that "clodhopper" is the phrase used "by his Misplaced Pages entry," which is in fact the case. That is exactly the word used to describe Xi in a comment attributed, without a source, to his wife.

    The article has already been flagged with a note that it lacks references, and the section that includes the "clodhopper" word has no citations at all. The overall article has four links; one is in Chinese, one is a dead link to CNN, and the other two have nothing to do with Xi's personal life. Accordingly, the section violates BLP requirements as well as the being non-Verifiable. The section is also patently POV.

    Moreover, the section puts all Misplaced Pages in an extraordinarily bad light. I do not believe that under any circumstances Misplaced Pages should simply be a gossip column about world leaders. We are not talking about Joe Shmoe, whose garage band somebody doesn't like; this article is discussing a man who is likely to become the next leader of China. I do not believe that Misplaced Pages's mission includes gossip and insult about world leaders. This has nothing to do with our politics or whether we like Xi or not. It is, instead, central to the principles of objectivity and neutrality that underlie Misplaced Pages.

    I have therefore removed the section.

    It can, of course, be found on the history pages, and has therefore not been lost to the archives. But we cannot have this kind of garbage -- a strong word, but that is what it is -- giving all of Misplaced Pages as bad a name as this does. If you want to revert, please be aware that you will have to defend putting back a section that (a) has NO references or citations, (b) violates Wiki: BLP; (c) violates Wiki: NPOV and Wiki: Verifiability; (d) is pure unadulterated gossip; and (e) has been quoted, to our disadvantage, in Newsweek.

    Timothy Perper 17:09, 4 November 2007 (UTC)

    Yes Timothy, unfortunately this happens quite often. Not enough eyeballs on some BLPs mean this problem is not going away. What would be interesting is to find out who added that material and check other contributions to BLPs. ≈ jossi ≈ (talk) 17:20, 4 November 2007 (UTC)
    It is this user: 71.106.171.102 (talk · contribs), which has been adding dubious and unsourced statements to several articles related to China and its leaders. ≈ jossi ≈ (talk) 17:26, 4 November 2007 (UTC)
    The above is an archived Biographies of living persons incident concerning the article above. Please do not modify it.

    David Wu (closed)

    David Wu – Controvery section moved to talk page – 22:12, 4 November 2007 (UTC)
    The following is an archived Biographies of living persons incident concerning the article above Please do not modify it.

    In checking out Category:Political sex scandals, I found this article. Does anyone else think the tone of David Wu#Controversy (link to version discussed) more suited to opposition campaign literature than to an encyclopedia? Septentrionalis PMAnderson 19:16, 4 November 2007 (UTC)

    The current version does seem like it is in opposition to the campaign. Oysterguitarist 20:33, 4 November 2007 (UTC)
    Moved to talk, since they are sourced; BLP does not require total removal. Septentrionalis PMAnderson
    The above is an archived Biographies of living persons incident concerning the article above. Please do not modify it.

    David North (Trotskyist) (closed)

    David North (Trotskyist) – link removed – 20:14, 7 November 2007 (UTC)
    The following is an archived Biographies of living persons incident concerning the article above Please do not modify it.
    ==


    • The content of the dispute is discussed here: Talk: David North (Trotskyist)I do not think that any other information is required to have this dispute settled and the relavant link removed. However, if it is necessary to substantiate in greater detail the nature of the violation of Misplaced Pages policy I will do so. // Joekay 04:21, 5 November 2007 (UTC)


    The above is an archived Biographies of living persons incident concerning the article above. Please do not modify it.

    Amir Abdul Malik

    I recently attended a conference in which Abdul Malik was an invited speaker. Not once did he mention the subject of zionism or make any references to jews. The[REDACTED] entry which portrays Abdul Malik as a vehemenent "anti-zionist" is a flagrant misrepresentation and character assassination of a living person. Furthermore, the term "Black Muslim" used to describe Abdul Malik is a misused political context. The term implies a political ideology of black separatism established by the Nation of Islam movement founded by Elijah Muhammad. Abdul Malik is a sunni muslim. The[REDACTED] entry suggests that Abdul Malik is a Black Muslim ideologue simply because his skin is black. This is indeed libel and racist to say the least. Characterizations which describe Abdul Malik as anti-jew or anti-white mislead the public and should be immediately removed. —Preceding unsigned comment added by 72.84.197.183 (talk) 04:46, 5 November 2007 (UTC)

    I did some research on this Abdul Malik, and he is indeed a racist bigotNastykermit 13:11, 5 November 2007 (UTC)

    The correct article is Amir Abdul-Malik Ali and the text is definitely verifiable. I left some references for the quotes in the article on the talk page. –panda 03:19, 6 November 2007 (UTC)

    There may also be some confusion about the subject of the article. In one of the references I found it states:

    (Malik is also referred to as Abdul Malik Ali, Abd Al-Malik and Amir Abdel Malik Ali. Note: This individual is not Imam Abdul R. Malik Ali.)

    This should probably be clarified in the article. Cross-posting to the talk page. –panda 03:42, 6 November 2007 (UTC)

    Jose Rodriguez (activist)

    In the last few days, multiple editors are reintroducing unsourced information (some of it plain silly, other likely defamatory) to this article.

    These are User: The Cite (since blocked as a vandalism only account,) User: Yellowbilby , User: Fatkidjumps , and User: Timsdad . Each has added more or less the same material once, getting one warning each. Any suggestions?--Slp1 13:37, 5 November 2007 (UTC)

    I will take a look. ≈ jossi ≈ (talk) 21:24, 5 November 2007 (UTC)
    Not much to do at this point. Will keep the article in my watchlist for a while. ≈ jossi ≈ (talk) 21:29, 5 November 2007 (UTC)
    Thanks! --Slp1 22:06, 5 November 2007 (UTC)

    Narendra Modi

    Relata refero (talk · contribs) has been continually deleting criticism of a biased magazine report vilifying this public figure. Revert 1, Rv 2, Rv 3. The user had the audacity in his third revert to tell me to "duscuss on talk" without doing it himself, and when I had already discussed my additions an hour before. The removal of counterresponses violates BLP, especially the problem that the criticism serves to "overwhelm the article or appear to side with the critics".Bakaman 18:59, 5 November 2007 (UTC)

    I was about to come here to ask for more eyes on this. I urge people to read exchanges on the talk page; non-notable and irrelevant criticism of a widely publicized magazine report, when the individual in question has chosen to not make a response, does not, in my opinion, cause the article to side with the critics; we would otherwise have an infinite set of responses and counter-responses. The above user also has problems with civility as well as talk page usage, it appears, and has just called me a lawyer for terrorists or some such thing. (I strongly object to being called a lawyer.) Relata refero 05:15, 6 November 2007 (UTC)
    The user above is the new avatar of Hornplease (talk · contribs), not a new user claiming to find "problems of civility" and "talk page usage" (especially rich because I discussed on talk first). As for the politically mischievous misinterpretations of policy and misrepresentation of thought processes (i.e. referring to Tehelka as "lawyers of terrorists", though narcissism may obfuscate this), those are obvious. The article should be written in a conservative manner so that the subject is not attacked by the use of dubious statements utilized by politically influenced "reports". If a source of more veracity criticzes a source of less veracity, it should obviously be noted per WP:RS.Bakaman 01:20, 8 November 2007 (UTC)
    I urge all those concerned to go to the talkpage and read the supposed "discussion." I see no RSes indicating that the subject was 'attacked'; I see no RSes of "more veracity" criticising those of less veracity. Utter nonsense. Will someone else please go to the talkpage and straighten this out.
    The continual speculation over my previous identities is frankly a trifle boring. Relata refero 21:43, 8 November 2007 (UTC)
    Quite simply, a user running away from their previous avatar is coming to make a ruckus on the same articles the previous avatar edited, using identical complaints and writing style. This user "fails to see" quite a lot of things, especially RS's cited on the page, which were (as noted in the diffs) removed under dubious grounds. What is obvious is that the "news report" is itself controversial and noting its accusations as gospel is a wild and dangerous violation of WP:BLP. The user above does not mind violating BLP, because they "fail to see" the use of any policy that hinders their political agenda.Bakaman 03:27, 9 November 2007 (UTC)
    The news report was widely discussed, but needs to be de-emphasised on the page. It doesn't deserve a giant section, for example. But it does not need so-called RSes - a random tiny minority of op-eds - that discuss the news organisation in general, unless the validity of the specific allegations have been called into question. That has not been done by any RS. (We do not preface every reference to a Tory politician in the Guardian by noting that the Guardian has been attacked for being leftwing.) Given that, I - er - fail to see what the problem is. Some additional input would be helpful.
    The continual speculation over my previous identities is getting even more boring. Relata refero 07:09, 9 November 2007 (UTC)
    The validity of allegations has been called into question, sources note that Modi did not make an appearance at a certain place that Tehelka claims he did. Tehelka is not like the Guardian, it is a shock paper, not really a paper that it in the mainstream. If Tehelka does not merit its own section, why did you place it in there? Tehelka is extremely controversial, and the 40-50% that vote for the BJP or are antithetical to the Congress are not just a minority, they may or well be a majority criticizing a minority secular view. The fact is that BLP is violated each time you remove criticism of the report, leaving libellous allegations to stand as gospel truth.
    Your charades in your previous identity are essentially identical to your current charades, so I find it the correct thing to note that you are not some concerned prodigy, but a battle-hardened veteran.Bakaman 01:18, 10 November 2007 (UTC)
    "Charades" is generally not used in plural except to refer to the game, I believe. Please note that any further discussion of my identity, which gets more boring with each reference, is best taken of this and other boards.
    If you claim that Tehelka is a 'shock paper' - which I have no opinion on, merely noting that it appears to meet every other requirement for a reliable source, and has as its editor the former editor of India's second largest newsmagazine - please do note that that is not germane to the issue as long as the specific quotes picked up and disseminated in innumerable irreproachable sources do not choose to discuss the fact that those particular quotes are dubious. The whole business is notable enough for a line or two in a bio, but not notable enough for an entire section dissecting exactly what was said and how much some members the CIA paid them to say it. I'm not I see the relevance of the disquisition on Indian politics, either. We are concerned here merely with what notable, reliable sources say about a living individual. Nothing in BLP says that even those allegations which have been widely accepted, and indeed not denied by the living person in question, need to have further discussions about their possible motive, the funding of the original (and not quoted) source, and such like. Relata refero 18:54, 10 November 2007 (UTC)

    Internet Infidels

    Internet Infidels is an organization best known for running the Internet Infidels Discussion Board, a large online forum. A recent incident involved the ousting of a board member named Janice Rael, and the controversy that arose regarding this on IIDB and other message boards. Recently anonymous IPs and new users have been hitting this article adding unsourced and poorly sourced original research about the incident.

    Most concerning is links to petitions calling for the ouster of "one of the board members involved", whose identity is obvious to anyone either remotely familiar with the forum or anyone who follows the links provided. Would appreciate more eyes on this, as attempts to clean up the article are being reverted. - Merzbow 06:18, 6 November 2007 (UTC)

    I have removed some of the stuff, the main contributor to the article is 71.225.187.87. Oysterguitarist 14:29, 6 November 2007 (UTC)
    Thanks. - Merzbow 18:40, 6 November 2007 (UTC)

    Jenna Gibbons

    In August this year, while RC patrolling, I came across this edit by IamJennaG. Judging by her edit summary, she claims to be Jenna Gibbons. The user requested that her full name not be made public. There was a similar case with The New York Times writer Touré who didn't want his last name shown. The Mediation Cabal Case in Talk:Touré resulted in his last name being removed because of WP:BLP concerns. Perhaps the Jenna Gibbons article can be renamed to simply "Jenna G" (assuming the user is who she says she is). Spellcast 21:32, 6 November 2007 (UTC)

    The user has never returned to Misplaced Pages. Either it wasn't her, or it wasn't a big deal. --Orange Mike 21:45, 6 November 2007 (UTC)
    I left a message on her talk page shortly after her edit to see if she would respond. But since there was no reply, I decided to let it pass. Just thought I might as well bring it up here. Better late than never. Spellcast 21:51, 6 November 2007 (UTC)


    Jamie Rush

    I work for MTV and am updating the biographies for all the MTV host which where written by them. How would I source this if its in a word document? Also why were the links taken down if it links you to video footage of the host themselves? Jamierush 17:39, 7 November 2007 (UTC)Jamie Rush

    1) A Word document is not a reliable source. Information in Misplaced Pages needs to come from neutral, verifiable third-party sources not linked to the subject of the article (or his/her advocates). 2) Those links were inappropriate, and violated our policies on external links. These articles are not to be used as a directory or advertising for the subject persons. Please - read and follow our policies on conflict of interest. Briefly, an MTV employee is advised not to edit or create such articles at all (except for certain non-controversial edits, such as to repair blatant vandalism) but to instead use the talk page to request help from neutral editors. --Orange Mike 17:49, 7 November 2007 (UTC)

    Libelous statements persistently reinserted

    The use of the defamatory statement "and pseudohistorian/novelist." in the listing for Dr Robert Lomas is inaccurate and libelous. He has never published a novel and he The term which it replaced 'amateur historian' Is accurate and fair. The replacement term is damaging to the reputation of practicing academic who works at reputable university and runs that university's masonic archive. I would suggest the phrase contravenes Misplaced Pages's policy on making libelous statements about living people and helps bring the site into deserving disrepute. —Preceding unsigned comment added by 82.68.68.134 (talk) 17:40, 7 November 2007 (UTC)

    There is no article Dr Robert Lomas are you thinking of Robert Lomas? Oysterguitarist 22:49, 7 November 2007 (UTC)

    Fred Singer

    Minor edit war on this text. The main cited source is a website called "Exxonsecrets", run by Greenpeace. There is also an opinion piece from The Guardian that briefly touches on Singer.

    I have concerns about this kind of sourcing in a BLP article. The allegation is financial conflict of interest, and I believe the sources are weak for such a loaded charge. I also believe there are WP:WEIGHT issues - for an article this small to devote a large paragraph to a poorly worded and vague charge is not appropriate.

    Input is appreciated. ATren 01:51, 8 November 2007 (UTC)

    The allegation has been reported by a major newspaper (The Guardian, and it was not an "opinion piece" either) and highlighted by Greenpeace, both notable organizations. It is not "tabloidy" and does not fall under presumption in favor of privacy - it's directly relevant to the work that Singer is notable for. This would appear to fall under the portion of WP:BLP stating: "If an allegation or incident is notable, relevant, and well-documented by reliable published sources, it belongs in the article — even if it's negative and the subject dislikes all mention of it." MastCell 04:14, 8 November 2007 (UTC)
    Greenpeace is a strongly POV organization, and thus is a weak reed to lean upon for reliable sourcing. --Orange Mike 04:18, 8 November 2007 (UTC)
    Also, the author of the Guardian article is an environmental activist. So the sources cited are an environmental organization and an environmental activist. ATren 05:01, 8 November 2007 (UTC)
    It's obvious that most criticism is going to come from hostile sources. The primary sources on which Greenpeace draw make it clear that SEPP (=Singer) was funded by ExxonMobil. The article notes that the evidence regarding tobacco is not conclusive, but you'd have to be pretty naive to suppose he was doing it because of a late-life switch of field to epidemiology. As regards policy, note that what WP:RS requires here is that we verify the allegation has been made by a serious group, not that it is correct.JQ 06:57, 8 November 2007 (UTC)
    Further note that WP:BLP requires "We must get the article right. Be very firm about the use of high quality references. Unsourced or poorly sourced contentious material — whether negative, positive, or just questionable — about living persons should be removed immediately and without discussion from Misplaced Pages articles, talk pages, user pages, and project space. An important rule of thumb when writing biographical material about living persons is 'do no harm'." So your contention that we don't have to be "correct" in this circumstance is bogus.
    I also think that the fact we are "discussing this" while the section remains visible in the article is in itself a violation of WP:BLP. --GoRight 17:33, 8 November 2007 (UTC)
    WP:RS specifically disallows extremist sources such as Greenpeace. Iceage77 08:54, 8 November 2007 (UTC)
    Are others opposed to the inclusion of this material agreed with Iceage77 that their objections rest on the claim that Greenpeace is an Extremist group?JQ 10:11, 8 November 2007 (UTC)
    I disagree; they are a group with strong POV; that's not the same as "extremist"! --Orange Mike 13:59, 8 November 2007 (UTC)
    The allegations themselves are also vague. There is a vague tie to tobacco, but no evidence of actual money being exchanged. And there is no evidence he received money from Exxon directly - the Exxonsecrets site indicates Exxon contributed to organizations Singer was involved in. IMO, the vagueness of the accusations combined with the partisan nature of the sources makes this a POV section. Now, I did find this Wash Post editorial] which seems to make a similar allegation, so I don't deny that people have made this claim. But the current section as it stands violates WP:RS and WP:WEIGHT. I suggest the following sentence, not in a separate section, and sourced to the Wash Post editorial: "Environmental activists have questioned Singer's past involvement with oil companies and automobile manufacturers, which have a vested interest in fighting off reductions of carbon dioxide emissions." ATren 14:36, 8 November 2007 (UTC)
    The WP comment is a direct statement of fact, not attributed to "environmental activists". And there are good primary sources for the fact, noted by critics, that he has worked with the tobacco industries. So the material should read something like "Singer has worked as a consultant to tobacco companies, oil companies and automobile manufacturers. Critics have argued that this constitutes a conflict of interest in relation to his work downplaying the dangers of tobacco smoke and CO2 emissions."JQ 23:24, 8 November 2007 (UTC)
    I oppose the inclusion of this material. Greenpeace is clearly a biased source in this context and if you follow the link provided there are allegations made but no sources provided. Given this, we have no reason at this point to believe that they have not simply fabricated everything found there on Singer. If more neutral and more direct sources are available, simply provide them and I will withdraw my objection to the inclusion of this section. I believe that WP:BLP is crystal clear on the demand for high quality references for contentious material as well as the need to "be right". --GoRight 17:33, 8 November 2007 (UTC)
    I don't follow. The ExxonSecrets site links to a vast array of sources. The Guardian piece is not "environmental activism" - it's published in a respected, mainstream newspaper with editorial oversight, fact-checking, a legal department, etc; it's not an "opinion piece" but a news report; and I don't think the efforts to dismiss it are at all reasonable. It's an entirely suitable WP:BLP source. But in answer to User:GoRight's request for "more neutral and direct sources" documenting Singer's ties to the oil industry, how about this recent Newsweek article on climate-change denial, which notes: "In April 1998 a dozen people from the denial machine — including the Marshall Institute, Fred Singer's group and Exxon — met at the American Petroleum Institute's Washington headquarters. They proposed a $5 million campaign, according to a leaked eight-page memo, to convince the public that the science of global warming is riddled with controversy and uncertainty. The plan was to train up to 20 "respected climate scientists" on media—and public—outreach with the aim of "raising questions about and undercutting the 'prevailing scientific wisdom' " and, in particular, "the Kyoto treaty's scientific underpinnings" so that elected officials "will seek to prevent progress toward implementation." The plan, once exposed in the press, "was never implemented as policy," says Marshall's William O'Keefe, who was then at API." Does that help? MastCell 23:25, 8 November 2007 (UTC)
    Yes, it does. I stand by my original statement that the Guardian article was written by an environmental activist, and barely touches on Singer. A Newsweek article is certainly more reliable. Now, was that so hard? :-) ATren 23:50, 8 November 2007 (UTC)
    Strictly speaking, how does the NewsWeek piece demonstrate any conflict of interest? It demonstrates that "his group" attended a meeting. It does not demonstrate that he accepted any funds or helped in any way. For all we know they were invited to the meeting and when the whole thing was raised he objected and walked out of the room (assuming "he" was there at all). In the end the plan was never implemented anyway so, again, where's the conflict of interest? If this is the best Newsweek could come up with to smear Singer it isn't much of a smear. This is flimsy at best IMHO. This is nothing but guilt by association, pure and simple.
    This is material better suited for the list of deniers page or the controversy page, not a BLP. --GoRight 04:37, 10 November 2007 (UTC)
    No, and it's fine to request additional sources. Adding more sources is always a good thing. I do still reject the idea that a report published in The Guardian discussing a public figure in his public context is an unreliable source for a BLP, but fortunately in this case the item in question is backed by multiple sources, so perhaps we can consider this resolved? MastCell 23:59, 8 November 2007 (UTC)
    I'll back down on the Monbiot piece even though he is biased. The publisher is reputable and the article does claim that Monbiot did some follow-up research which is note worthy I guess. If the section does not already do so, however, I will update it to briefly characterize Monbiot's views for additional perspective to the reader. --GoRight 04:37, 10 November 2007 (UTC)

    Fabian Basabe

    There's nothing in this article that really asserts this person's importance, other than being a socialite, yet it's full of attacks on his character. Corvus cornix 04:02, 8 November 2007 (UTC)

    I am placing that article in AfD. Not a notable individual. 04:42, 8 November 2007 (UTC) —Preceding unsigned comment added by Jossi (talkcontribs)

    William M. Gray

    This is another BLP for a global warming critic. The dispute involves two allegations that are sourced to blogs. See this historical link to the current revision. One claim is sourced to a personal blog, the other to a blog written by environmental group RealClimate.org. I believe these are insufficient sources for a BLP. Even if RealClimate might be acceptable on a (e.g.) the global warming page, I believe it is inappropriate to source for a BLP, especially for critical claims.

    User:William M. Connolley has edit warred on inclusion of these allegations (, , ), which is also a concern given that Connolley is one of the contributors to RealClimate - so he is effectively linking to his own work. I am not going to revert this anymore, since I don't want to wander into 3RR territory, but I believe it is inappropriate. Input is welcome. ATren 21:19, 8 November 2007 (UTC)

    I guess global warming is the new big fad here on this page. :-) Steve Dufour 05:32, 9 November 2007 (UTC)
    They're both from me. :-) I was reading about global warming and came upon these two scientists' articles. I'd never heard of these scientists before, so I can't really evaluate their reputations, but the blog sources seemed to be blatant NLP violations. It appears that I may have taken too literally the uncompromising language of the official BLP policy. If it's common practice to allow self-published sources in BLP articles for non-personal criticism, then that should be reflected in the policy. ATren 07:15, 9 November 2007 (UTC)
    Edit warring complains should not be posted here. Place these at WP:AN/3RR if needed. As for the use of sources used, I will take a look. ≈ jossi ≈ (talk) 21:25, 8 November 2007 (UTC)
    It's not much of a war - not worth reporting at 3RR - I just mentioned it because we are at an impasse and input is needed. ATren 21:28, 8 November 2007 (UTC)

    I checked these sources. The Denver Westwood News, is a long article that surely can be used. The RealClimate website may also be used, as it includes commentary of named scientists . The other blog, seems to be by an expert on the subject, so it may be used as well. Having said that, and not being familiar with the topic at all, I would say that you need to address these issues with other editors in talk, and if no common ground found about the use of these sources, proceed with dispute resolution by means of an RfC. ≈ jossi ≈ (talk) 21:33, 8 November 2007 (UTC)

    Also note that William M. Connolley is a respected and experienced editor of Misplaced Pages, so you may try and look at his concerns in that light. ≈ jossi ≈ (talk) 21:35, 8 November 2007 (UTC)

    Are respected, experience editors allowed to link to their own unpublished materials? ATren 21:36, 8 November 2007 (UTC)
    You should address that question to him. ≈ jossi ≈ (talk) 21:38, 8 November 2007 (UTC)
    I did (see his talk). He seems to think it's fine. I am also an experienced editor here and I think it is not, especially on a BLP. That's why I'm here - because we disagree. ATren 21:41, 8 November 2007 (UTC)
    I have given you my opinion based on my experience with BLPs. Best course of action will be to pursue dispute resolution, and do away with rhetoric and accusations of bad faith, POV pushing, and the like. ≈ jossi ≈ (talk) 21:47, 8 November 2007 (UTC)
    Nonsense. Until you got involved, this has been a polite conversation. ATren 21:50, 8 November 2007 (UTC)
    Uh? ≈ jossi ≈ (talk) 21:53, 8 November 2007 (UTC)
    ec With regard to this, from the BLP page: " If someone appears to be pushing an agenda or a biased point of view, insist on reliable third-party published sources" - how can a personal blog and RealClimate.org be considered "reliable third-party published sources"? It's not a third party, and it's not published. BLP policy is clear on this. These sources may be usable in a non-BLP article, but they are clearly inappropriate according to BLP policy. ATren 21:50, 8 November 2007 (UTC)
    I do not think that the BLP policy was designed to avoid criticism of a person's work by people from the same community (in this case scientists). ≈ jossi ≈ (talk) 21:53, 8 November 2007 (UTC)
    That should be reflected in the policy then. BLP does not list such exceptions, and if there are exceptions in cases like this then they should be documented. ATren 21:55, 8 November 2007 (UTC)
    I would suggest you re-read the lead of the policy page, in which the spirit of the policy is summarized. ≈ jossi ≈ (talk) 21:56, 8 November 2007 (UTC)
    I have read it, and reread it. It very clearly states that unsourced or poorly sourced material is to be removed on sight. It later elaborates on "poorly sourced" to include unpublished materials. If there is some hidden meaning, I am missing it, and if I am missing it, others will too - therefore it should be modified to reflect actual practice. I suggest the inclusion of a qualifier: "In some cases, unpublished material is acceptable if the author is considered an expert in the field." ATren 22:04, 8 November 2007 (UTC)
    BLP is an extension of WP:V, in which that caveat is included. See WP:V#Sources, and specifically WP:SPS. ≈ jossi ≈ (talk) 22:17, 8 November 2007 (UTC)
    The section you linked to contains the following text: "Self-published sources should never be used as third-party sources about living persons, even if the author is a well-known professional researcher or writer; see WP:BLP#Reliable_sources." - this seems pretty unambiguous. ATren 22:19, 8 November 2007 (UTC)
    My understanding is that if the material in question is related to a person's work in a field, BLP does not apply. If the material is contentious, e.g. casting aspersions on the person, that is where BLP applies. You may want to ask for other opinions via an WP:RFC. ≈ jossi ≈ (talk) 22:22, 8 November 2007 (UTC)
    You are the BLP expert, so I trust your judgement, but the policy clearly does not reflect this. Would you object if I boldly updated the policy pages (BLP and V?) ATren 22:31, 8 November 2007 (UTC)
    You can propose a change in the policy talk page 02:02, 9 November 2007 (UTC) —Preceding unsigned comment added by Jossi (talkcontribs)
    The current policy seems clear; it applies to all material in BLPs, not just "aspersions," and the material here is negative in either case. I think BLP should demand removal of the personal blog at least. Cool Hand Luke 07:41, 9 November 2007 (UTC)

    Marilyn Carroll

    • Marilyn Carroll - There have been repeated entries by a few users to add in information from an opinion article written by a POV source in a student-run newspaper. The comments from this source do not match statistics found in the peer-reviewed journal articles, so I don't see it as a reliable source just because it is in a newspaper (additional thoughts on this at Talk:Marilyn Carroll). Would someone be able to check and offer their opinions? Thanks! // Umn student 06:23, 9 November 2007 (UTC)

    Milvina Dean

    Is listed as having died on October 16th, 2007, which was the death date of the next-to-last survivor of the sinking. Can someone fact-check this please? —Preceding unsigned comment added by Pjern (talkcontribs) 07:32, 9 November 2007 (UTC)

    It's been corrected already. Matthew Brown (Morven) (T:C) 01:51, 10 November 2007 (UTC)

    Michael E. J. Witzel

    Michael E. J. Witzel was protected on Oct 11 due to edit warring over the inclusion of a few sentences that say Witzel is biased against Hindus, e.g. . Obviously, charges of religious bias need to be strongly substantiated; the sourcing in this particular case is an op-ed piece and a quote in a news article. Discussion on the talkpage hasn't led to consensus, and outside input is needed, especially since the protection is set to expire on Nov. 12. --Akhilleus (talk) 16:51, 9 November 2007 (UTC)

    Outside input is desparately needed here, because the talk page is discussion mostly involves two people who have already edited the article. --Akhilleus (talk) 17:13, 10 November 2007 (UTC)
    Once again, let me plead for some outside input here. --Akhilleus (talk) 17:32, 11 November 2007 (UTC)

    Mike Brown (football team owner)

    I have just reverted every edit, and there were quite a lot of them, in the Mike Brown (football team owner) article since October 28. The article was full of BLP violations and outright vandalism. Keep an eye on it, ok? Corvus cornix 00:22, 10 November 2007 (UTC)

    I just removed a lot. Most of it was blaming him for the team's record. BTW shouldn't it be "American football team owner"? Steve Dufour 03:20, 10 November 2007 (UTC)
    Would others please weigh in? The massive personal attacks are being reverted by multiple editors. Corvus cornix 22:49, 12 November 2007 (UTC)

    An official biography can and will be used. 'Self-published material may never be used in BLPs unless written by the subject him or herself.Subjects may provide material about themselves through press releases, personal websites, or blogs. Material that has been self-published by the subject may be added to the article only if:

       * it is not contentious;
       * it is not unduly self-serving;
       * it does not involve claims about third parties;
       * it does not involve claims about events not directly related to the subject;
       * there is no reasonable doubt as to who wrote it;
       * the article is not based primarily on such sources.
    

    These provisions do not apply to subjects' autobiographies that have been published by reliable third-party publishing houses; these are treated as reliable sources, because they are not self-published.

    The views of critics should be represented if they are relevant to the subject's notability and can be sourced to reliable secondary sources, and so long as the material is written in a manner that does not overwhelm the article or appear to side with the critics; rather, it needs to be presented responsibly, conservatively, and in a neutral, encyclopedic tone.

    - The controversy articles are completely fact with no opinions except from Mike Brown himself. Mr. Brown's organization is relevant to the subject's notability. If it was not relevant the title would not be Mike Brown (Football Team Owner).

    If someone appears to be pushing an agenda or a biased point of view, insist on reliable third-party published sources and a clear demonstration of relevance to the person's notability.

    - Stadium Deal: I have cited legal documents and have provided no opinion (except of the court). I provided the official complaint and court findings for this important event. This clears up any rumor on the true nature and finding from the Stadium Deal Controversy.

    - Official National Football League statistics (Ownership Time line) were provided because they are relevant to the Subject's notability. As the General Manager(GM), President, Owner of a professional sports organization, Mr. Brown has an effect on the statistics produced by the team on the field, as does Marvin Lewis and the GM or Owner of any team. No Opinion is in the statistics.

    - The Loyalty Clause: Much has been written concerning this clause in the contracts. So much that Mr. Brown felt it necessary to write a guest editorial piece to explain why he invented the clause and how he came to the point. I included the article to explain the Subject's point of view to help explain this controversial issue in a logical manner. It may appear to be a bias for Mr. Brown, but his logical explanation of the loyalty clause is cause for inclusion in the Subject's page not censorship.

    - The players legal troubles is relevant to the Mr. Brown's, Roger Goodell's, Marvin Lewis's, and Gene Upshaw's notability, as represented on their pages. Sports media wrote on the subject and is a notable event in his time as owner, GM, and President. The way he dealt with each situation is listed next to player. No opinion was presented. I presented the facts about the event as it has and will continue to unfold as each judgment is made in court.

    - The Family Run Team article should be excluded until it is further developed and provides an explanation of the issue.

    Everything related to his management of the team has an effect on his notability. If being an owner, GM, and president had no relevance the hall of fame would not exist or remember owners and GMs.

    Misplaced Pages also contains biographies of people who, while notable enough for an entry, are not generally well known. In such cases, editors should exercise restraint and include only material relevant to their notability. Material from third-party primary sources should not be used unless it has first been published by a reliable secondary source. Material published by the subject must be used with caution.

    NO Original Research Verifiability Neutral point of view

    You are making accusations of bias but you do not argue why you believe there is bias and where it is. You are not editing this article you are censoring the article. —Preceding unsigned comment added by Minerva717 (talkcontribs) 01:27, 13 November 2007 (UTC)

    Please look at the Barry Bonds article. No matter how you try to present the facts a controversial issue or event is just that controversial. His steroids controversy is on his page. It is something that has been notable and should be included not censored from his article. Also look at the Bill Clinton page. His numerous controversies have not been censored. The controversial topics listed have been reviewed and if they need to be edited further they should. You need to edit them and actually add the the article rather than censoring the article. You have provided nothing to the article. Don't be an editor if you are not willing to do research and provide substance to the articles on Misplaced Pages.--Minerva717 01:45, 13 November 2007 (UTC)

    Minerva has spammed this diatribe all over Misplaced Pages. I have reverted her latest edits. Please weigh in. Corvus cornix 18:53, 13 November 2007 (UTC)

    This is basically a rant about how all the problems of the team are the fault of the owner. That's cool. I live near Oakland so I know all about Al Davis, the owner of the Raiders, although he is much more interesting than Mr. Brown seems to be. Maybe there should be a policy: "WP is not a sports talk show" Steve Dufour 02:37, 14 November 2007 (UTC).

    Note this article continues to have serious BLP problems. It is too much for the couple of us editors who are trying to help. Thanks. Steve Dufour 13:10, 14 November 2007 (UTC)

    Molestaion allegations against michael Jackson

    Full of unsourced and negative info. I'm thinking deletion for this one mainly because Misplaced Pages is not a tabloid newspaper, but I don't particularly feel like nominating it. MER-C 08:28, 10 November 2007 (UTC)

    Raquel Reyes (model)

    Another somewhat suspect and generally unreferenced BLP. Probably notable enough to save it from the axe. I've already corrected the title from "Raquel Reyes (Transsexual)". MER-C 08:49, 10 November 2007 (UTC)

    Jayalalitha

    I have removed some sourced contentious and libellous material as per Suggested procedure. I left message in talk page for around 2 days and then removed as per above procedure. I substantiated my removal with various wiki rules. User:Idleguy is reverting those contents again and again without following steps mentioned in above procedure. He keeps telling consensus has reached before. I was involved in those discussions as a newcomer and discussions focussed mainly about whether it is sourced or not. Discussions never centered about WP:UNDUE or Misplaced Pages:Avoiding harm. I have also provided my views as per Inclusion test. Please suggest him to offer his views on inclusion test and then add contentious material after Third opinion on whether it is WP:UNDUE or not. In past 2 years he has added lot of unsourced contentious allegations in this article like this about her sexual orientation/her marriages etc. . I have added POV tag and cited criticism section of WP:BLP as reason. He is removing POV tag without any reason. I request protection for this article till few issues are resolved--Indianstar 13:57, 10 November 2007 (UTC)

    The above editor is blatantly twisting my edits ignoring conveniently that I was merely reverting a spree of edits during which lines and paras were both removed and added without noting that the contentious additions were added by someone else and not by me! Whatever I have edited and added presently is fully cited and previous consensus in the same noticeboard here reached a consensus that it was both fully cited and from reliable sources. As this edit reveals, he has indulged in deleting sources just because he seems to be a fan of Ms Jayalalithaa.
    Further the information on Jayalalitha being a mistress/concubine etc. is fully known in Tamil Nadu and sometimes - as the sources reveal - around the world. I have also backed it up with completely reliable sources like The Economic Times, New York Times, Asiaweek etc. which he claims as merely "websites, some blogs, some[REDACTED] mirror sites". Thus is satisfies the first criteria, the second too because it is well cited and sensitive terms like "mistress" uses specific citations that mention that word and only one line or two in the entire article talks about this crucial information, so no undue weightage is given. Idleguy 16:54, 10 November 2007 (UTC)
    I am not convinced that avoiding harm means avoiding facts. Some of the diffs offered by Indianstar are troubling but date to August. The diff offered by Idleguy was sourced. There could be some concern about WP:UNDUE but that is more easily corrected. If you have sources from the credible news outlets you mention, bring them in. Stick with a brief sentence or two and let's be done. JodyB Roll, Tide, Roll 17:10, 10 November 2007 (UTC)
    Economic times citation leads to Page cannot be displayed message. Newyork times citation is the personal page by Shashi tharoor hosted by Newyork times. I am not disputing whether it is sourced or not. I am only saying out of 300 thousand references about her, there are hardly 5+ references says the word "Mistress" or something relevant. From Google search results, if you filter blogs, Wiki mirror sites you will end up with few references quoted by Idleguy. I need to be away for a day. I will argue my case after a day.My edit history of diff offered by Idleguy shows, I have removed as per WP:SPS which is a valid reason. How it can be bad faith?--Indianstar 17:20, 10 November 2007 (UTC)
    Hardly 5 is misreading numbers; atleast 9 fully credible and reliable sources independently state the same. If Economic Times link doesn't work, then take a look at the print archives, since the exact date is clearly provided. And as JodyB says it has been kept to just a single line without giving undue importance. Idleguy 17:55, 10 November 2007 (UTC)
    • I have now added another 3 books with pp as sources for the specific word of "mistress". This is such a well known and much written fact that it is found across journals, magazines, newspapers and even books and all this is just in English. I have several Tamil and even Telugu magazines which have spoken about this but being an English language encyclopedia, this load of well cited info should suffice I believe for such an important fact which is only stated in 1 line. Idleguy 18:13, 10 November 2007 (UTC)
    Reply to JodyB's message. Please see my logic for why it is Undue with references. My self assessment of Harm test is given. If we decide this as due weightage, it may encourage others to google search favourite leaders name with some bad words, find insignificant sites and defame them. Let us remain as encyclopedia. Concerns about Biographies being flooded with insignificant personal life details were raised by several wikipedians like this. --Indianstar 12:39, 11 November 2007 (UTC)
    Pl. do not dismiss Times of India, The Economic Times, Asiaweek, and journals and books by authors (including a feminist) as "insignificant". It seeks to throw cold water on editors who have only chosen the most reliable sources for backing up such contentious claims. Idleguy 02:19, 12 November 2007 (UTC)

    Kelsey Grammer

    The Kelsey Grammer bio is in serious need of attention. In my opinion, it is poorly written, and too heavily weighted with negative and unsourced information.130.239.63.178 17:54, 10 November 2007 (UTC)

    I took out a lot of that. It looks like he is an object of interest because he mentioned that he might run for Congress. Steve Dufour 08:03, 11 November 2007 (UTC)

    Brian Flemming

    Per here and here. Needs watchlisting/intervention. Relata refero 22:05, 10 November 2007 (UTC)

    So because he's alive he can't possibly be anti Christian? 22:26, 10 November 2007 (UTC)Hoofheartedinthewinnercircle
    Users are insisting on wording that draws conclusions about motivations, rather than simply describing the subject's actions in neutral terms. This is, I feel, unnecessary. Matthew Brown (Morven) (T:C) 22:44, 10 November 2007 (UTC)
    You feel? 22:54, 10 November 2007 (UTC)22:54, 10 November 2007 (UTC)
    Any chance of a substantive reply, rather than one appearing to pick up only on an immaterial turn of phrase? Matthew Brown (Morven) (T:C) 23:07, 10 November 2007 (UTC)
    It also appears likely that Horribleperson and Hoofheartedinthewinnercircle are serial identities of the same person. Matthew Brown (Morven) (T:C) 22:47, 10 November 2007 (UTC)
    I toned down the language a bit. It is not bad now, I feel. BTW Mr Flemming is unusual because he is speaking out against Jesus and Bill Gates both. :-) Steve Dufour 08:13, 11 November 2007 (UTC)

    Historical pederastic couples, again

    Historical pederastic couples went through some heated, multi-editor, multi-admin turmoil last month. At the end of the 20th and 21st centuries section, look: There are now several unsourced claims of pederastic relationships with children whose first and last names and sometimes their picture is given. These children are almost certain to still be alive. Why does User:Haiduc insist on including such BLP violations?

    I'm not touching it because I saw what happened last time. I hope someone with more BLP experience will please trim the contemporary listings. 209.17.131.233 15:15, 11 November 2007 (UTC)

    Could somebody provide diffs to identify what's wrong? - Jehochman 15:40, 11 November 2007 (UTC)
    I think it's all of the entries in Historical pederastic couples#20th and 21st centuries where the identified child might still be alive, of which I would say there are several. Biochem67 13:22, 13 November 2007 (UTC)
    And in general, there are huge amounts of unsourced allegations in there. (And the issue of classifying non-sexual friendships as 'pederasty') Matthew Brown (Morven) (T:C) 20:40, 14 November 2007 (UTC)

    Please delete my biography from the Misplaced Pages

    Because of repeated vandalism that I have been prevented from correcting, my biography is continutally inaccurate and significantly misrepresents both me and my work.

    Therefore, I hereby request that my biography be deleted from the Misplaced Pages.

    Sincerely,

    Carl Hewitt —Preceding unsigned comment added by MonaKea (talkcontribs) 22:31, 11 November 2007 (UTC)

    If you want it to be deleted you will have to do it through an AFD. Oysterguitarist 23:58, 11 November 2007 (UTC)
    It doesn't differ that much from the short biography found here. —Ruud 00:22, 12 November 2007 (UTC)
    Have your lawyer contact the WikiMedia Foundation. WAS 4.250 02:06, 12 November 2007 (UTC)
    Please see Misplaced Pages:Biographies of living persons#Dealing with articles about yourself and Misplaced Pages:Contact us/Article problem/Factual error (from subject) for what you can do about factual errors in a biography about yourself. –panda 16:01, 12 November 2007 (UTC)

    The Misplaced Pages harassment of Professor Hewitt has to stop

    The Misplaced Pages should be ashamed of itself for harassing Professor Hewitt. Arthur Rubin took away his category as an American Logician. Then Ruud Koot deliberately insulted Professor Hewitt by taking away his Emeritus title and he changed the title of Hewitt's "Seminars, Publications, and Academic Biography" to "blog", which is (deliberately?) misleading. Also Ruud has been censoring those who attempted to protest his antics. First they called it the "Great Firewall of Ruud." But recently I have heard it referred to as "Ruud's Musharraf Strategy."

    The Misplaced Pages harassment of Professor Hewitt has to stop.--LittleSur 23:00, 12 November 2007 (UTC)

    The article on Professor Hewitt is still being censored and the harassment has continued. —Preceding unsigned comment added by 171.66.33.196 (talk) 23:04, 14 November 2007 (UTC)

    I have no objection, provided the articles on Actor model and his interpretation of concurrent computing are also deleted. (He's not a mathematical logician. I'm not qualified to decide if he's a philosophical logician.) — Arthur Rubin | (talk) 23:47, 12 November 2007 (UTC)

    Is this source a reliable one?

    • 2nd II None (edit | talk | history | protect | delete | links | watch | logs | views) - I asked an editor to cite reliable sources about some information. It's obvious the user is a new comer and do not know how to cite source, but that's not a problem, I'll cite it properly later.

    The problem is that I do not know if this source is reliable: KnownGangs.com.
    Thanks in advance.--Tasc0 23:19, 11 November 2007 (UTC)

    It's an extremely commmercial site advertising an ex-cop's supposed expertise and services as a consultant. I'm inclined to say no (Jefferson, WI isn't exactly a hotbed of gang activity). --Orange Mike 23:32, 11 November 2007 (UTC)
    Ok, thank you for your opinion. I'm going to have to wait to others editors opinion, yet I'd have yours in mind.
    Noting how many times that source is cited in the Crips article.--Tasc0 00:16, 12 November 2007 (UTC)
    Not a reliable source IMO, for same reasons as stated by OrangeMike. There must be other sources available. ≈ jossi ≈ (talk) 04:29, 13 November 2007 (UTC)
    I removed the source and the now unsourced information; linking this disccusion in the edit summary.--Tasc0 22:53, 13 November 2007 (UTC)

    Gordon Todd Skinner

    Pat Miletich and Miletich Fighting Systems

    Both of these Misplaced Pages links contain false or unconfirmed biographical information about a living individual and his company. Repeated attempts to correct the information on these links have been deleted. Mr Miletich does not endorse these links and respectfully requests that they be removed or locked for his personal editing privileges only.

    Questions about the incorrect information on these links may be directed to <e-mail address removed to protect privacy>

    Mnbusinesslawyers 13:51, 12 November 2007 (UTC)

    First, please register a different account. Role accounts are generally not allowed, i.e. accounts named after an organization, per the Misplaced Pages:Username policy. Once you create a new account, please provide a specific list of objections to help us do a thorough job of fixing these articles. - Jehochman 14:13, 12 November 2007 (UTC)
    See also (!!!). Quatloo 20:38, 12 November 2007 (UTC)

    Misplaced Pages:Articles for deletion/Christopher James Mitchell

    The user proposing deletion is making allegations about the producer Christopher James Mitchell, using reliable sources which describe a person with some similar characteristics, but who is not clearly the same person. I'm not sure if this is a BLP policy violation, or how the policy applies in practice to deletion discussions, but I thought it was worth raising here. EALacey 22:35, 12 November 2007 (UTC)

    Tina Brown

    Resolved

    I have made some amendments to this article as it created a much too positive portrayal of Tina Brown who has aroused a lot of contreversy in her journalistic career. There were some negative reviews of her latest biography, The Diana Chronicles, and I mentioned one with an appropriate reference but this was deleted. I have now re-added some additional material which has been appropriately sourced. I would request that this page be watched for any future vandalism i.e. removing anything negative about Tina Brown herself. Ivankinsman 08:43, 13 November 2007 (UTC)

    Gladly. I welcome any negative material about that bi....err, person (so long as we source it, of course). Watchlisted. Jeffpw 09:29, 13 November 2007 (UTC)

    Ron Paul

    User:Vidor introduced into Ron Paul the statement that "Paul wrote" certain racist statements which Paul claims were written by someone else. When I reverted, Vidor made this same charge twice more on the Talk page. Believing that WP:BLP trumps WP:TALK, I added "alleged" the first time, deleted the claim from Vidor's comments (4 times) the second time, and gave Vidor a level-3 BLP warning (3 violations). OrangeMike, a helpful editor, restored Vidor's original (apparently violative) comments, but accepted my argument and let me remove them again. Now User:68.162.80.156 has appeared and restored Vidor's comments again twice, for which I gave the IP a level-2 and level-4 warning (it is clear the IP is familiar with me and the Paul page because it alludes to my outing sockpuppets of James Salsman). Still believing that WP:BLP trumps WP:TALK, I will proceed to delete Vidor's comments again. If the IP restores these comments, I believe it is ripe for block on that count. I believe its latest comments also make it ripe for temporary block as an obvious sockpuppet ("I'm editing from an IP because I feel like it and because Misplaced Pages policy permits me to do so"; no valid reason stated for the account's use by a clearly experienced editor; account used only for racism controversies). I would appreciate it if someone would (1) let me know if my interpretation of WP:BLP is correct; (2) see if checkuser can tie this account to another; (3) block the IP and/or main account if warranted. This narrative can be verified by consulting the IP's contributions and the Talk:Ron Paul history. John J. Bulten 22:35, 13 November 2007 (UTC)

    Paul Wolfowitz‎

    Should a Wikinews interview interviewing a third party, who accuses the subject of—among other things—two extra-marital affairs be in the body of an article on the Wikinews template?

    I think that Wikinews interviews shouldn't even be allowed as external links in such case. It's hard to imagine that a interview like this would satisfy the requirements of WP:EL. On the prominent Wikinews template in the body of the article, it looks like a clear BLP/WEIGHT to me problem.

    Full disclosure: I have a very rocky past with user adding this article. He considers a lot of my recent activity harassment, but this is a good-faith BLP concern that I have about third-party Wikinews links in BLPs generally. Cool Hand Luke 16:31, 14 November 2007 (UTC)

    There is nothing good faith about this. Wikinews is a sister project of the Wikimedia foundation. In fact, links to the interviews are even Wikified and there are templates. All interviews are recorded and transcribed. They are all conducted with notable people on a subject. The interview in question is with Vanity Fair contributing editor Craig Unger, who is also a Fellow at New York University Law School, former editor-in-chief of Boston Magazine, former deputy editor of the New York Observer. He is a New York Times best-selling author, and is well aware of libel issues. He is a journalist of the highest degree. We include notable journalists and their research and insight on almost every article, whether it be Bob Woodward or William Kristol. Indeed, Craig Unger is cited as a source on the Dick Cheney article.
    The problem is that:
    1. Cool Hand Luke is harassing me and he has been for a few days because he was on the losing side of a contentious ArbCom where he represented User:THF in a dispute I had.
    2. Cool Hand Luke doesn't like what Unger says.
    All of Unger's statements are researched; indeed...the information is already found on other Misplaced Pages articles. One only has to look at Shaha Ali Riza to see. Luke's harassment, where he is seeking to suppress information he doesn't like in an effort to bother me, is becoming a problem. In fact, I could easily cite to Unger's book in these articles with ALL of the same information that is found on a sister project interview. And I could cite to the same sources Craig Unger cites. Instead, there is a box leading to an interview if people are curious. But it is all information that is already found on Misplaced Pages. --David Shankbone 16:41, 14 November 2007 (UTC)
    It is good faith. I think BLP is an important policy, as my frequent participation on WT:BLP suggests. There does not seem to be any information about this first affair. To include this information we would normally have to say it's an op-ed or Unger's view. We shouldn't make irresponsible BLP claims, nor should we link to those claims without qualification.
    I'm not sure I have an opinion on Wolfowitz‎, but I think we should be careful including potentially defamatory links in all biographies. Cool Hand Luke 16:50, 14 November 2007 (UTC)
    That's not true. We link to articles that cover these things anyway. We aren't Craig Unger's fact checkers - Craig Unger is and he has sources and he is a very credible journalist. You are basically questioning someone who has written a book that is well-sourced, and that's great since it's selective. You are a known conservative on the project, so no need to be coy, and you simply don't like what Unger has written and said. But that is not a policy issue since he is a journalist who has his sources, and Wolfowitz's affairs aren't undocumented in other places. , et. al. This really comes down to your politics, CHL. You are second-guessing a highly credible source, and what you are doing just boils down to musing. --David Shankbone 17:03, 14 November 2007 (UTC)
    When did I become a known conservative on the project? What do you know of my opinions? I think most conservatives are not exactly fond of Bush or Wolfowitz. Does this go toward commenting on the contributer? I really don't have a view. This is just not a reliable source nor an EL-compliant link from BLPs. Cool Hand Luke 17:10, 14 November 2007 (UTC)

    The "interview" is laced with David's POV, and he is the one edit warring to link it here. This raises many red flags for me, given that there seems to be a fast track from David's POV to the encyclopedia:

    • David puts on his "Wikinews" hat and interviews someone who agrees with his POV. He then steers the interview to reflect his own POV (I can point to several examples of this).
    • David "publishes" his interview on Wikinews.
    • David removes his "Wikinews" hat and put on his "Misplaced Pages editor" hat. He then links to his Wikinews article as a reliable reference on the BLP articles of those who were subject to criticism in the interview.

    Does anyone else have serious concerns about this fast-tracking of one editor's views into Misplaced Pages articles, especially BLP articles? Even if Wikinews is a reliable source (questionable), even if the interview were conducted with a neutral tone (it's not), should the author of the interview himself be adding links to it in BLP articles? ATren 16:54, 14 November 2007 (UTC)

    And now we have the other ArbCom warrior who is also adept at trolling my edits. Both CHL and ATren were on the losing side of an ArbCom, and now they are trolling my edits and work. I have not only interviewed liberals like Craig Unger, but conservatives like Evangelical Senator Sam Brownback and Republican Congressman Tom Tancredo, and I am going to be interviewing a third Republican Presidential candidate tomorrow. In fact, my interviews are all across the board, they are all transcribed, and if somebody doesn't like what one of those people say, they can talk to them. But this is exactly what Wikinews was designed to do by the Wikimedia Foundation; we just happen to have two people who left an ArbCom without the results they wanted harassing me now. --David Shankbone 17:03, 14 November 2007 (UTC)
    Do not call me a warrior and a troll. You are the one who harassed me for several weeks by bringing up a year-old conflict. Why is it that everyone who disagrees with you is a "warrior"? ATren 17:38, 14 November 2007 (UTC)
      • OK, I see now. I'd like to see an example of a conservative Misplaced Pages editor interviewing a conservative author and then linking to the interview in an article about a liberal figure about whom the author has written. Thatcher131 17:01, 14 November 2007 (UTC)
    That would in effect be like saying we can't link to Wikiquotes or Wikisource. And yes, I've interviewed conservatives as well. For instance, my interview with Senator Sam Brownback is linked to on the Traditional Marriage Movement. I'd be happy to link to articles criticizing liberals by conservatives, I just don't have one. --David Shankbone 17:03, 14 November 2007 (UTC)

    ATren: I don't generally see a problem with it. Interviews with a subject are sensible links from that subject. What I find problematic is using that subjects views about a third party to link that interview from third party articles. This is basically self-published commentary on BLPs, which has been discussed a lot on WT:V and WT:BLP recently. Cool Hand Luke 17:10, 14 November 2007 (UTC)

    We link to other Misplaced Pages articles all the time. Inter-wiki links, including to sister projects, are not verboten. Other Misplaced Pages articles aren't reliable sources, either, and contain commentary. Should we not include them, either? --David Shankbone 17:13, 14 November 2007 (UTC)
    As I said above, I think such links are generally good, but they don't belong in third-party BLPs. Cool Hand Luke 17:17, 14 November 2007 (UTC)
    Journalists are used as sources throughout the Wolfowitz article, and this is no different. Aside from that, there is no reason not to include a recorded and transcribed interview with a source that is entirely incredible, just because Wikinews conducts it. Especially since that person is discussed at length. If you want to do a laudatory interview with Wolfowitz or someone at the AEI, then that should be included as well. I myself would be happy to conduct such an interview. --David Shankbone 17:21, 14 November 2007 (UTC)
    I would not be happy with that. Dueling partisan links are not an encyclopedia. I'm here to work on an encyclopedia, not to praise or demean living people.
    Removal is not because Wikinews hosts it. If this were any other interview, we wound never include it in the body of the article as a sidebar. If we included it at all, it would be as an op-ed EL, and if Wolfowitz‎'s links were properly pruned, it wouldn't have a place there either. Enumerable similarly "expert" people have opinions about others. They are interviewed, post on their blogs, and even publish about it. We should not treat Wikinews differently in the case of third-party interviews. It fails WEIGHT & NPOV, RS, BLP, ect. Cool Hand Luke 17:27, 14 November 2007 (UTC)
    You are applying policy and guideline as if I took the entire interview and planted it within the article, and that's not the case. NPOV is not the issue here, and it does not fail WEIGHT (Wolfowoitz and The Office of Special Plans, and its development under Wolfowitz, are not minor issues); nor BLP nor RS. You cite policy and guideline without providing any reasoning - as it it's just obvious, and it's not. You're just wrong. --David Shankbone 17:35, 14 November 2007 (UTC)

    Isn't David an accredited journalist, and Wikinews a valid source for linking to in general? I ask as I see that on the Reliable Source noticeboard, we endorse linking to sources that are penned or authored by people who are also Misplaced Pages editors, even if they are in some sort of conflict with them, such as User:Dking and his LaRouche website, which is generally all negative towards it's subject? Wouldn't the same standard be applicable here according to policy? I was specifically thinking of this discussion where the idea was endorsed, and that outside website by a journalist (Dking) is amazingly more negative overall than the odd comment in this Wikinews interview by the interview subject. • Lawrence Cohen 17:29, 14 November 2007 (UTC)

    Yikes. User seems to have monumental COI issues. I don't think this behavior should be held up as a model. Cool Hand Luke 17:35, 14 November 2007 (UTC)
    I mentioned it as I had David's page on my watchlist after working with him before, and I watch the sources board pretty reliably. It seems that precedent is accepted that journalists who have outside work are free to link sources related to them back into Misplaced Pages. Unless theres a policy against that, I don't know if I see a problem with David's linked Wikinews story. • Lawrence Cohen 17:43, 14 November 2007 (UTC)
    • Much of this sort of discussion is covered by William M. Connelly. I also note ATren was railing against him over some of these same issues, which were addressed there. --David Shankbone 18:05, 14 November 2007 (UTC)
    • No no no. Wikinews is as unreliable as Misplaced Pages. Such an interview may be includable in the article about the person being interviewed, but third party references are clearly a violation of the spirit of the various rules in WP:V and WP:BLP regarding self-published sources. What editorial process/oversight stands between David Shankbone and the publishing of his interview? None that I am aware of. I would revert such an inclusion until the cows come home, and do so exempt from 3RR, per the BLP policy. - Crockspot 18:25, 14 November 2007 (UTC)
    Wikinews is not a reliable news source? Is Signpost? Why? • Lawrence Cohen 18:34, 14 November 2007 (UTC)
    I have asked at Misplaced Pages:Reliable_sources/Noticeboard#Wikinews. • Lawrence Cohen 18:36, 14 November 2007 (UTC)
    Do I really have to explain this? It is fairly well spelled out in WP:V. Reliable sources have editorial oversight. They are also not wikis, which can be edited by anyone, and no assurance can be given that a reader will not get a page full of "POOP" when they load the source. Can you show me anywhere where Signpost is used as a reliable source in an article on information about a third party? - Crockspot 18:38, 14 November 2007 (UTC)
    I linked your question back to this discussion, since you failed to mention that your question is in the context of a BLP article, and third party commenting on a living subject, which makes a huge amount of difference. - Crockspot 18:44, 14 November 2007 (UTC)
    Fair enough, and thank you for that. David, Atren, Luke, and yourself all appear to be a bit too close to the Wolfowitz issue as semi-involved to having a possible COI stake in this case which is why I wanted to try to offer an outside view, and get more visibility on the case from the RS board. Thanks! • Lawrence Cohen 18:50, 14 November 2007 (UTC)
    Thank you for that assumption of good faith, considering that I do not recall ever editing the Wolfowitz article, and have been a volunteer on this board since the day it was created. - Crockspot 19:06, 14 November 2007 (UTC)
    Sincerely, no disrespect was meant. It was a bad turn of phrase on my part. Sorry. • Lawrence Cohen 19:17, 14 November 2007 (UTC)
    It seems to me to make sense to link when the interview is with the person directly. For example, on Craig Unger. Linking to general interviews that happen to talk about someone seems problematic not just from a BLP concern but also because they simply aren't the thrust of the interview and so the interview is only marginally related (if it were as an external link we would likely say no even without the BLP concern). JoshuaZ 18:54, 14 November 2007 (UTC)
    Your opinion then is that in general, Wikinews is a fine source, but not in this case? I'm just curious what the standard would be if CNN aired this interview, or Time Magazine printed it. Would it be acceptable then in this case to include on Wolfowitz? • Lawrence Cohen 19:02, 14 November 2007 (UTC)
    You appear to be attempting to draw a conclusion that is unrelated to the comment he made. He said nothing about the suitability of wikisource, he commented generally about interviews as sources. Interviews are generally to be treated as primary sources, since there is not usually a process of fact checking that goes on, other than to verify that the printed words are what came out of the interviewee's mouth. When the interviewee is commenting on a third party who is living, we get into a BLP issue, no matter where that interview was published. - Crockspot 19:07, 14 November 2007 (UTC)
    OK, that is fair. I'm genuinely curious about the suitability though of Wikinews, and on BLPs especially. In regards to interviews, though, what if the interview subject is himself a reliable source or expert on a topic? I would imagine, for example, that any comments about George W. Bush made by Laura Bush in an interview would be perfectly fine to include at least under BLP in GWB's article. Likewise, an interview with an expert on a given person I imagine would be acceptable, as well. Or am I wrong? • Lawrence Cohen 19:17, 14 November 2007 (UTC)
    I have the same question. --David Shankbone 19:20, 14 November 2007 (UTC)
    • There are probably several million possible permutations of hypothetical situations I could comment on. Let's stick to actual issues and situations. - Crockspot 19:23, 14 November 2007 (UTC)
    The main problem here is using a third party to comment on a living person. The Wikinews aspect merely exasperates the problem because of the prominent and official-looking template. I posit we would never use such interviews, unqualified, for BLP information, but we should certainly not link to the article in a bold sidebar. Cool Hand Luke 20:19, 14 November 2007 (UTC)
    So BLP would prohibit passages such as, "In an interview, journalist and expert on New York Mafia, Mitch McSmith says, 'Johnny Jones is known for his ties to New York Mafia," if the interview is about some other topic, such as NASA, or specifically an interview about Mitch McSmith, it's forbidden? But at the same token, if Mitch McSmith writes in a book that Johnny Jones has gangster ties, we can use it as he's an expert? Does his expert status have a BLP clause because he made his statement in a different forum? That confuses me and doesn't seem to square with other notions of reliable sourcing, as it puts a big clause on there. It's like saying we can quote George Bush for calling the President of Iran the President of the Axis of Evil on a State of the Union, but we can't use that if Bush says it while giving an interview on the Today Show about his favorite Texas recipes. • Lawrence Cohen 20:27, 14 November 2007 (UTC)
    CHL: I think I see your point on this. However, I disagree with Crockspot's take on it, which appears to be unequivocal. If you could take off your fighting gloves, how would this affect the recent interview I published with the Dalai Lama's representative, where we specifically discuss the status of the 11th Panchen Lama, who disappeared when he was six years old because he was not the Chinese government's deigned religious leader? I put a "See also" on his page. Does this fail your criteria, or is it different? I'm asking in all good faith; I realize there is nuance here. --David Shankbone 20:30, 14 November 2007 (UTC)
    We can make quotes with attribution, but this is not a notable attributed quote (which would be reported by other sources). It's not even classified as an opinion link, like the op-eds are. It should be a regular opinion link at the bottom of the page if included at all. Cool Hand Luke 20:32, 14 November 2007 (UTC)
    So Unger isn't an expert on Wolfowitz, having written a published book on the whole thing as a journalist? I thought the established precedent for DKing and Cberlet that I saw on the RS Noticeboard covered comments from experts on BLPs from various forums being fine sources. • Lawrence Cohen 20:35, 14 November 2007 (UTC)
    First, isn't an expertise exception to BLP—BLPs adhere to a higher standard. Second, writing a book about the Bush administration does not make all of ones remarks about a dozen living people automatically notable and deserving of a special sidebar. Books and political criticism is not rare, and an encyclopedia is not improved by prominently linking to the unverified off-the-cuff remarks which were fortunate enough to find their way to a Wikinews reporter's ears. Cool Hand Luke 20:47, 14 November 2007 (UTC)
    I don't know what your bad faith question infers, but how would BLP be an issue on such an article? --David Shankbone 19:31, 14 November 2007 (UTC)
    Using it as a source of biographical information. A bare link is probably not against BLP, although it should be on-topic. Cool Hand Luke 20:32, 14 November 2007 (UTC)

    As an additional note (unless I'm misreading; there is a lot of information), the contentious information about Wolfowitz that Unger said in his interview with David, that some don't want to link from the article via Wikinews, is functionally in the Wolfowitz article already in the extensive coverage of his romantic relationship with that World Bank staffer, from various sources. It appears that David's Wikinews interview just has an affirmation of all that, and basically functions as a supplemental source. • Lawrence Cohen 20:32, 14 November 2007 (UTC)

    Wrong. In BLPs, no source (and no claim) is better than a poor source. All of his claims are not currently covered in the article, so I fail to see how it's confirming anything, but insofar that it acts as a confirmation, we should keep the reliable sources and dump the unreliable ones (including this interview of a third party). We can't use reliable sources to excuse unreliable ones. Cool Hand Luke 21:00, 14 November 2007 (UTC)
    Unger is not an unreliable source. --David Shankbone 21:01, 14 November 2007 (UTC)
    Unger is a person, not a source. Your interview with Unger is presumably a reliable account of Unger's views. The interview, however, is not a reliable source for biographical details about other living people. Cool Hand Luke 21:07, 14 November 2007 (UTC)
    How does it differ from the multiple journalists quoted in the section Paul_Wolfowitz#Wolfowitz.27s_relationship_with_Shaha_Riza? --David Shankbone 21:11, 14 November 2007 (UTC)
    None of those sources has its own sidebar (the WEIGHT issue I mentioned), none of this is presented without qualifications. That is, they all have controversial or derogatory claims have sources and attribution, which makes their point of view clear. Finally, there's a measure of fact-checking that tends to make non-self-published sources more reliable for biographical details. Cool Hand Luke 21:19, 14 November 2007 (UTC)
    For one thing, both The Telegraph and the Washington Post (the first two citations) have editors, and editorial policies that require that reporters talk to multiple sources, and lawyers who make sure that potentially libelous content is properly sourced and vetted. None of that applies here. It might apply if you were quoting from one of Unger's books, which presumably has gone through a similar process. Your interview might qualify if it was published in Mother Jones or Vanity Fair or The New Republic etc., where it also would have been subject to editorial review and oversight (although it still would be unacceptable to cite yourself and then edit war when questioned). But your unfiltered interview does not meet those standards. Thatcher131 21:22, 14 November 2007 (UTC)
    • My view is that this is not a BLP issue because the only fact that was being added was that Wikinews had an interview with Craig Unger who discussed a subject relevant to Paul Wolfowitz. That fact is undeniably true - such an interview is on Wikinews. The contents of the interview are a matter for Wikinews to debate. However, I would agree that it is probably inappropriate per external links policy to link the interview from Paul Wolfowitz, not because of the discussion of his private life, but for three separate reasons. Firstly Craig Unger is talking in fairly abstract terms about the administration and not in specific terms about what Paul Wolfowitz himself did. Secondly, he is known to be a high-profile critic of the Bush administration generally. Thirdly, Unger does not state his sources but simply says "My sources say ..." which does not allow for further checks on the basis of what he is saying. It would be legitimate to link this interview from Craig Unger's page but not, in my view, from the pages on the people he happens to mention in his interview. Sam Blacketer 21:18, 14 November 2007 (UTC)

    Craig Unger is a super reliable source. Certainly his writings on October Surprise have stood the test of time, and remain a fine example of inves5igative journalism .... its not like he has a bone to pick or an axe to grind, and he certainly wouldn't stoop to the level of using any source, regardless of reliability, to bolster his work. Torturous Devastating Cudgel 21:57, 14 November 2007 (UTC)

    Well said (if sarcastic). The notion that a partisan reporter's extemporaneous remarks are a reliable source for living people flies in the face of WP:BLP. Partisan books don't put a commentator above BLP. Cool Hand Luke 22:24, 14 November 2007 (UTC)
    I didn't take that as sarcastic because on the Ari Ben-Menashe Unger specifically cautions, back in 1992, using him as a source. And just because you do not like a reporter's politics doesn't mean their information is inaccurate. --David Shankbone 22:29, 14 November 2007 (UTC)
    "claimed caution" after using him as a source for years ... what that about page A1 stories and page D15 retractions ...... Torturous Devastating Cudgel 23:20, 14 November 2007 (UTC)
    Just because they're partisans who have written two books against the Bush administration doesn't mean all of their uttered claims are reliable. The burden in BLPs is on those who wish to demonstrate the source is reliable. There is no "expert" exception to primary self-published claims in BLPs, and even if there were, partisan books do not demonstrate expertise. Cool Hand Luke 22:42, 14 November 2007 (UTC)

    Wait a minute. This is as much OR as if David Shankbone had performed the interview and just added it direct to the Misplaced Pages article. Posting it first in Wikinews doesn't change the OR violation one iota. Corvus cornix 03:36, 15 November 2007 (UTC)

    OR isn't allowed on Misplaced Pages, but it allowed on a sister project. The OR policy states that WP is not to be used for OR - but that doesn't mean that OR, as evidenced with many other editors, is disallowed to make it on here, especially since it's the words of a notable person (as opposed to a study, etc.) --David Shankbone 03:52, 15 November 2007 (UTC)
    Agree with CoolHandLuke and Thatcher131. This is inappropriate. It's not as if there is any shortage of journalists, even journalists at major papers, with strong opinions about Paul Wolfowitz, we have many better sources than this, which smacks of original research. In this interview, Unger is speaking off the cuff, he is using his memory, he isn't checking his sources for every statement he makes. We can cite his books, if Unger wrote an article, we can cite that, because then he probably is checking every sentence is in the right place, but this interview can really only be cited for Unger's views on Wolfowitz. --AnonEMouse 17:35, 15 November 2007 (UTC)
    I agree as well and have withdrawn support of including it. --David Shankbone 17:39, 15 November 2007 (UTC)

    Bat Ye'or

    Users Eleland and Bless sins keep inserting into Bat Ye'or (edit | talk | history | protect | delete | links | watch | logs | views) her supposed real and maiden names. Since there are no reliable sources in the article for either of those names, such edits constitute a violation of WP:BLP. Beit Or 20:53, 14 November 2007 (UTC)

    No discussion on the talkpage, and it appears cited to the International Journal of Middle East Studies. Could you expand on your concerns a bit? Relata refero 10:19, 15 November 2007 (UTC)

    Michael J. Formica

    I am the subject of this article, and would like it deleted. Although whomever it was who wrote the article seems to have a rather high opinion of me, it is not one that I share. I do not feel that my contributions or accomplishments warrant 'notability', and, frankly, I also feel somewhat exposed by this entry.

    Pedro has denied my request for speedy deletion twice, but I believe his intentions are misuided. The spelling idiosyncracies in his entries suggest he is European, and, therefore, would not even have a point of reference for who I am.

    In any event, I would appreciate some attention to this matter. --69.177.176.129 14:14, 15 November 2007 (UTC)

    Comment Misplaced Pages:Articles for deletion/Michael J. Formica also refers. If someone can cite a policy that we must delete on a subjects request I'll gladly do it, but I can't find anything that hints at this. Pedro :  Chat  16:39, 15 November 2007 (UTC)

    Robert Chambers

    I was doing some edits on this page and I noticed that there were quoted obsenities from Robert Chambers comments inserted randomly, some using the 'N' and 'B' words. I don't quite know what your policy on that is. I was just doing simple editing, and I was going to italicize one piece of text I had found previously inserted into the article, then found I had accidentally bolded it so I removed that! It was then I noticed the language used in the comment. I do feel the page should be looked at by someone more experienced in these matters than I am. I'll keep off the page until I hear a reply on this matter.--MurderWatcher1 16:44, 15 November 2007 (UTC)

    Xavier Romeu

    • Xavier Romeu (edit | talk | history | protect | delete | links | watch | logs | views) - The article is about a public figure in Puerto Rico currently under investigation, who has been accused in the past. The article was part of an edit war in and around October 20 between different users, including many potential socks trying to add inflammatory content about the accusers to discredit them. I stopped it all by fully protecting the page (see my comments about the protection). I also reported a checkuser report, citing at least 6 users, (now 7) who were adding the exact same information and references, but was found to be inconclusive due to confusing CU evidence. I have not blocked anyone myself. One user provided, in my view, adequate sources, asking me to include the content, which I did (diff). I admit my edits weren't perfect, and in retrospect I don't know if they were enough/too much. It appears that the edit war has now continued, and I've reverted a couple of times since the content added was the same of the previous edit war, leading me to believe that this new user is part of the old puppets. The current version is as edited by the user in question, since I'm now handing this issue to other admins because I'm afraid my efforts to add sourced content has affected my independence on the matter, and would like an outside party to take the appropriate action, whichever that may be. // Mtmelendez 17:17, 15 November 2007 (UTC)
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