Wikipedia:Dispute resolution noticeboard/Archive 10
This is an archive of past discussions on Wikipedia:Dispute resolution noticeboard. Do not edit the contents of this page. If you wish to start a new discussion or revive an old one, please do so on the current main page. |
Archive 5 | ← | Archive 8 | Archive 9 | Archive 10 | Archive 11 | Archive 12 | → | Archive 15 |
Velvet Revolver
Resolved. — TransporterMan (TALK) 21:18, 21 October 2011 (UTC) |
Closed discussion |
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Dispute overview
I hope this is the correct place for this, if not, please direct me to it. A user keeps adding a rumour to the article about a singer the band members performed with. One of the band members, Duff McKagan, stated that they might work with one of the singers they performed with at a benefit concert, leading to a number of sites speculating that Jimmy Gnecco is said singer. The only facts there are, is that they might work with one of the singers. There is nothing that states that they are working with anyone. Users involved
Yes.
Resolving the dispute
I've discussed this with MillerCrosses on his talk page, under the heading Velvet Revolver, while he has replied to my talk page under the heading Revolver. I have made him aware of Wikipedia policies such as WP:CRYSTAL and WP:3RR and explained why rumours shouldn't be included.
Perhaps explain to him why the content was removed, why it was disruptive to the article incase I havn't made myself clear. It is a fairly small issue that seems to have become bigger, perhaps simply for lack of understanding how wikipedia works. HrZ (talk) 17:20, 21 October 2011 (UTC) Velvet Revolver discussionDiscussion about the issues listed above take place here. Remember to keep discussions calm, brief, and focused on the issues at hand.
I've left an edit war warning on both of your talk pages. That having been said, neither the source which reported the facts on which the speculation is based nor the source which makes the speculation is a reliable source and the rumor/speculation cannot be included in Wikipedia without a reliable source. (Per this policy.) The sentence and its source should be removed (but not by HrZ, unless Miller Crosses agrees for him to do so). MillerCrosses you said in this edit that "If the nice people at wikipedia told it was wrong to add it then that would be fine." You've now been told (and I'm not only nice, I've been called relentlessly nice ), so would you please delete the sentence and reference? Regards, TransporterMan (TALK) 20:51, 21 October 2011 (UTC)
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Journal of Cosmology
Stale. When the dispute becomes fresh again, try an RFC or good old talk page discussion. Steven Zhang |
Closed discussion |
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Dispute overview
Dispute on adding info and references to article, being reverted in order to keep only negative info in the article, talk page discussions on peer review status and info going nowhere. Users involved
I am concerned about the involvement of users WMC and Headbomb, as they seem to be trying to only keep negative information on the Journal in the article. And, on the other hand, 174.252 (who appears to be having IP address changes, so the last two sections may change) is clearly trying to add positive information on the Journal. I've been trying to work in the middle of all of this and just add information in general to the article, but i've run up against WMC and Headbomb's extremely negative opinion about the Journal. I have to work against comments like "the problem is that it publishes ideas which are utter nonsense, and rubbish that would never be found in any respectable journal" and "It's fringe stuff, new age crap, patent nonsense..." and "Well J Cosmology is run by a bunch of kooks". I recently tried to add information that had been heavily covered in the news, but it was constantly removed, leaving the majority of the article just negative information about the Journal. Discussion on the talk page is clearly going no where and i'm not quite sure what to do. SilverserenC 18:49, 8 October 2011 (UTC)
Yes.
Resolving the dispute
Multiple discussions on the talk page that don't go anywhere.
Admittedly, i'm not quite sure. I didn't want to escalate this to ANI, so I thought this would be a good first step. Perhaps we can get further opinions about the argument? SilverserenC 18:49, 8 October 2011 (UTC) Journal of Cosmology discussionDiscussion about the issues listed above take place here. Remember to keep discussions calm, brief, and focused on the issues at hand. The recent problems were mostly caused by IP 174.xxx.xxx.xxx, a long term persistent sock of User:BookWorm44/User:Chemistryfan (and as you might expect, the old "problems" were also caused by these guys and their socks). Now that they've been blocked, and the article and talkpage semi-protected, it should be fairly easy to resume normal editing practices on that article now that it's are free of disruptions from SPAs. Silver Seren puts the whole thing out of context. Regarding the "addition of content that's been covered in the news", every journal gets mentioned in the news from time to time, and listing every occurrence is simply WP:ISNOT/WP:CRUFT. Just imagine what it would mean for journals like Physical Review Letters, Nature, Science, The Lancet, BMJ, etc... if we start making explicit mentions of everything that's been covered in the press. That Paul Davies wrote an article supporting Martian exploration is nothing special, and really out of place in this article. That's something best left for the article on the Colonization of Mars. Although since JOC is not a reliable source, it probably shouldn't be mentioned at all, except perhaps on the article about Paul Davies. Headbomb {talk / contribs / physics / books} 19:03, 8 October 2011 (UTC)
I think this request is quite badly construed. As noted by HB, the problems seem to have come from a malicious banned sock. The immeadiate solution to this, if the sock is IP-hopping, is to semi the page; that way people who aren't the sock can have a reasonable conversation. I don't care for the way SS has been echoing the sock, above. So I'm inclined to think that nothing really needs to be done here, other perhaps than SS calming down a little. There is a discussion on the article talk page: do we really need this report? William M. Connolley (talk) 21:00, 9 October 2011 (UTC)
Hi everyone, sorry for the delay in getting back to you about this. Per SilverSeren's comment above I will ignore the issue of the sockpuppets and comment only on the disputes between the established users on the page. I have taken a look at the talk page, and it seems that there are a number of things being disputed. In my experience, the best way to get a handle on complex disputes is to make a list of all the different issues being disputed, so that we can concentrate on specific, concrete issues. Here are the ones that I have noticed:
Please let me know if you agree with this list. Also, if I have mis-characterized any of these disputes or left anything out, please correct me below. After we have found some agreement on what is under dispute it should give us a clearer idea of how to proceed. All the best — Mr. Stradivarius ♫ 12:58, 10 October 2011 (UTC)
Lest there be any doubt that mainstream climate scientists have paid attention to climate change artcles published in the journal of cosmology see here. Google "Journal of Cosmology" + realclimate to find more references and coverage of the realclimate discussion. --174.252.199.217 (talk) 21:02, 10 October 2011 (UTC)
212.219.63.252, when you say "it aint neutral", are you referring to the JOC itself or the WP page about it? The journal itself may not be neutral, but is notable, so I do not see deletion is a serious option. The WP article should try to be neutral, and therefore should not focus only on the JOC article that has been most criticized. For instance, the JOC's contribution to discussion about missions to Mars should be covered, as something that has been picked up by major media. Kalidasa 777 (talk) 00:18, 11 October 2011 (UTC)
First, I want to clarify my level of involvement in this dispute. IIRC I have never edited the article until this past week. My only prior involvement with this topic was way back in March 2011 when this journal's reliability came up at the reliable sources noticeboard where I said that this doesn't appear to be a reliable journal:
I only started this editing this article because references to it (such as the one at DRN) kept showing up on my watchlist and I decided to check it out. So, I've only edited the article for about a week. That's my current level of involvement from a topic perspective. From an editor perspective, I am not familiar with Headbomb. I don't recall any prior interaction with them. I do recognize Silver seren's name and I'm sure that I've interacted with them at some point. Probably several points. But I don't remember anything specific. If I had to guess, our interactions were probably positive. I worked on this article for about a week and this was my experience: I made a series of changes to the article all of which were clueful and were explained in the edit summaries.[7][8][9][10][11] [12][13] [14] Another editor also made a change with a clear explanation in the edit summary.[15] Headbomb reverted all of these changes with an edit summary of "revert bunch of completely inappropriate changes". Such an edit summary is entirely inadequate. It gives me no indication of what they didn't like or why. Both me and the other editor started discussions on the talk page.[16][17] Between the two of us, Headbomb was asked 7 times why he reverted our changes before he gave anything but a vague, meaningless response. In fact, he tried to shift the burden to me to explain why I objected to his reverts. It took a lot of time, but most (but not all) of the changes have since been added back into the article by Headbomb (which suggests that he didn't really examine what he reverted) but it was a difficult, painful process. At the same time I added (what could be considered) positive information about this topic: I also added (what could be considered) negative information about this topic:
The 'negative' information was eventually allowed back in the information. The 'positive' information was not. The other editor's contribution was also eventually allowed back in the article but again it was 'negative' information: At the same time, another editor added 'negative' information[18] and that was allowed into the article. Regarding the proposed addition of their Mars exploration, I remember reading about this in the news, but had no idea that this was the same group. I didn't make the connection until I read the above discussion. I think some mention belongs in the article. The entire discussion can be found here: Mass revert of improvements. (Note that there was some confusion over the difference between peer-review and reputation which we didn't quite work out. At first I didn't understand what they were saying, but when I did, I explained I was really referring to the publication's reputation.) I'm going to conclude this statement by basically repeating what I said at the end of that thread: There's was an awful lot of discussion to get relatively few changes in the article, even a change to fix a run-on sentence was originally rejected and required multiple posts on the talk page to get into the article. There are several accusations of WP:OWN and after being there for a few days, but I am reaching a similar conclusion. We all have to work together. The sky is not going to fall if we add a paragraph about Mars or add a phrase about Penrose/Wickramasinghe or whoever to the article. I suggest the reigns be relaxed and other editors be allowed to work on the article. Take from this what you will. I have no real interest in this topic (beyond the Mars bit) and I have no wish to get any more involved in this dispute. I am removing the article from my watchlist. I'm not familiar with how DRN works, but I hope that this was helpful. Good luck to all. A Quest For Knowledge (talk) 17:49, 15 October 2011 (UTC)
Thanks for your further comments, everyone. I think that this dispute is too big and too complex for us to resolve here, and that it is probably time to look at some higher-level dispute resolution mechanisms. I suggest drafting an RfC that addresses the questions of whether to include the Mars mission coverage and how to portray the Hoover paper controversy; I think this would be a good next step to make towards resolving the issues here. We should also list the RfC at the appropriate WikiProjects to get their input, as WikiProject norms (particularly of WikiProject Journals) seem to play a big part in this dispute. Does this sound like a reasonable course of action to everyone? — Mr. Stradivarius ♫ 05:50, 16 October 2011 (UTC)
Closing this one as stale. See comment at the top.
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Ralph Nader presidential campaign, 2000
Being handled at ANI. |
Closed discussion |
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Dispute overview
I am working very hard on this article. User:Mystylplx is persistently violating WP:NPOV with edits like this: http://wiki.riteme.site/w/index.php?title=Ralph_Nader_presidential_campaign,_2000&diff=453569704&oldid=453553960 and edit warring. User:Mystylplx also posts negative remarks about me on talk pages. Users involved
Yes.
Resolving the dispute
Yes. Warnings, etc.
Mediation. 99.12.181.124 (talk) 20:25, 22 October 2011 (UTC) Ralph Nader presidential campaign, 2000 discussionDiscussion about the issues listed above take place here. Remember to keep discussions calm, brief, and focused on the issues at hand. Note: There is currently an ANI on this. This goes way beyond just a .content dispute. Mystylplx (talk) 20:34, 22 October 2011 (UTC) User:Mystylplx is harassing me and fueling disputes, but I'm not going to post that on every Wikipedia page or board. 99.12.181.124 (talk) 21:06, 22 October 2011 (UTC)
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Space Rangers 2: Dominators
Issues resolved, reliable sources required. |
Closed discussion |
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Dispute overview
A warning that is more specific than the previous warning is being removed without explanation. Users involved
I can't comment to the editor's page, because it is protected. Editor has not responded to Discussion comment. Editor has responded to me on my Talk page only with boilerplate. Boilerplate threats, that is.
Not yet.
Resolving the dispute
Yes, the page is blocked from editing
Open a dialog? Allow my edit? 98.210.209.79 (talk) 06:39, 23 October 2011 (UTC) Space Rangers 2: Dominators discussionDiscussion about the issues listed above take place here. Remember to keep discussions calm, brief, and focused on the issues at hand.
I've posted on the talk page; I'll paraphrase what I put there. Essentially, if you want to write about problems with a puiece of software, we need verification. This means a reliable, third-party source which documents any problems would need to be provided. Without this, we cannot include the information on Wikipedia, as we cannot be sure that it is accurate. ItsZippy (talk • contributions) 16:32, 23 October 2011 (UTC)
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Battle of Tali-Ihantala, Continuation War
Referred to the Mediation Cabal here. Regards, Mr. Stradivarius (talk) 13:56, 24 October 2011 (UTC) |
Closed discussion | ||
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Dispute overview
These articles are biased in favor of the Finnish point of view and attempts to introduce alternative views have led to long disputes. The overall problem is how to fairly present contradictory information from reliable sources and avoid original research. It looks like the other user has trouble with this. The dispute can be narrowed to specific statements in the articles. 1) ...according to Soviet sources the Finns advanced and took the settlement of Novyi Beloostrov on 4 September, but a Soviet counter-attack threw them out the next day,[ref1][ref2] although the war diary of the Finnish 12th Division facing the settlement[ref3] does not mention the fighting and notes that it was quiet at the time[ref4] and neither does Finnish chronology of the Continuation War.[ref5][19]
Users involved
Yes.[28]
Resolving the dispute
There are long discussions on the talk pages that go in circles.[29][30][31][32] I tried third opinion[33] and the no original research noticeboard twice.[34][35] There were reports created in the incidents and edit warring noticeboards.[36][37] Comments were also made on an admin's talk page[38][39] and he eventually suggested to go here.[40]
Help determine how to present the information from sources correctly, so that the articles are more balanced. YMB29 (talk) 00:51, 19 October 2011 (UTC) Battle of Tali-Ihantala, Continuation War discussionDiscussion about the issues listed above take place here. Remember to keep discussions calm, brief, and focused on the issues at hand.
Absolutely disgusting behaviour from the both of you. You both need a good whack on the knuckles. You are both on notice, any further incivility and this will be escalated to ANI. Articles should be balanced and fairly represent all major viewpoints represented in reliable sources. If there's a question on whether sources used are reliable, RSN is good for that sort of stuff. Resolving content disputes is what this board is for, not to engage in a tit-for-tat discussion. If discussion is to continue in such a manner then it will be closed and referred to ANI. Steven Zhang The clock is ticking.... 08:53, 20 October 2011 (UTC)
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American Staffordshire Terrier
Discussion is now taking place at the article's talk page. As arguments here are going in circles and the discussion is getting split between the two locations, I am closing this. If you wish to contribute to the dispute, please use the talk page. |
Closed discussion |
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Dispute overview
The American Staffordshire Terrier (AmStaff) and others in this breed group are controversial among dogs because their temperament and suitability to be around people and other animals are in dispute. To this end, the American Temperament Test Society (ATTS) gives tests of dog temperament to people who volunteer to bring in their dog and also pay the testing fee. The results are summarized by group to attempt to make statements about breed temperament. The ATTS is a corporation that charges for their tests and also provides breed summarizes at their website. The ATTS is not a society for dog breed experts or anything of the sort. In the AmStaff article, the percentage of AmStaffs passing the ATTS test is compared other breeds. This is an inappropriate use of the ATTS data. The reason is that the sample of dogs from each breed has not been selected with an eye for them being random, representative of each breed. It is a voluntary, paid sample. In this situation, one would expect that results would be unreliable. This is due to several bias-inducing mechanisms, notably self-selection bias. In short, people are not expected to bring in aggressive dogs and pay for them to flunk a test. The ATTS and those who use their data have made no effort to make their sample by breed representative and do not acknowledge the high likelihood, based upon basic logic, that breed temperament summaries will be biased high and that rankings will likely be misleading. Therefore, the portion of the AmStaff article citing the ATTS statistics should be removed until these concerns are addressed. Users involved
Yes.
Resolving the dispute
I've discussed this with k84m97 on the discussion section of this article in the subheading "ATTS test". I was usually not signed in but had this IP 76.92.68.79.
Provide an outside perspective to judge this dispute based upon the merits of both sides. Wvguy8258 (talk) 21:36, 20 October 2011 (UTC) American Staffordshire Terrier discussionDiscussion about the issues listed above take place here. Remember to keep discussions calm, brief, and focused on the issues at hand. I am a mediator/clerk here at DRN. I've taken a look at the discussion so far and the thing which strikes me the most is that there is not a single discussion about why this material can or cannot be included under Wikipedia policy. The entire discussion is about the merits and deficits of the material itself. The most fundamental policy for inclusion in WP is verifiability and that policy begins:Another important policy is no original research which says, in effect, that Wikipedia only reports information as it has been set out in a reliable source without interpretation or analysis of that information (and "reliable source" means something very specific, not just it's dictionary-definition meaning). Part of the no original research policy is the policy on primary sources. It says, in pertinent part, (Emphasis added.) ATTS is, for the data it produces, a primary source. Its experimental results cannot be directly used in an article because they have not been published in a reliable source. A quick scan of Google News would appear to indicate that the ATTS data has been mentioned in mainstream newspapers, which are one kind of reliable source, but you must realize that all that can be included in an article is what those newspaper articles or other reliable sources say about the ATTS results, without interpretation or analysis (and you must even then avoid letters to the editor, reader blogs, and certain other types of newspaper features, see identifying reliable sources for help with this). Once that is done, then other reliable sources may be found which question the ATTS results. If so (and only if so), then what those sources say may also be included in the article to call the ATTS results into question, but not to exclude the ATTS results. Regards, TransporterMan (TALK) 14:07, 21 October 2011 (UTC) Correction: Newspapers are not a reliable source for scientific data, per this rule. The ATTS results should not, therefore, be included in the article unless reported in a reliable source of the type which would look at their work with a critical, professional eye, such as a peer-reviewed scientific journal. Sorry for the confusion. — TransporterMan (TALK) 14:42, 21 October 2011 (UTC)
I've had a brief look at this dispute and thought I might give my suggestions. Firstly, can we please discuss this civilly? Let's keep the discussion on the article in hand, rather than the personality, editing history or whatever of other users. As TransporterMan said, reliable sources would be required for us to include the ATTS test. Since then, this source has been provided to verify the claim made. I'm afraid that this is not really a reliable source; what we really need is a peer-reviewed, scientific journal. Dogs in Canada is a magazine - not a scientific journal - and is not peer-reivewed. If the ATTS tests are to be included, a better source would need to be found. Can I also just suggest that the two of you do not edit the page until this dispute is resolved. You've done well to bring the issue here - it is now counter-productive to try to edit the page before we reach resolution. I also suggest you take a look at our 3RR policy. ItsZippy (talk • contributions) 19:48, 22 October 2011 (UTC)
Citizen of the USA, the problem with the second source is that it seems to be original research. The publishers seem to be the people who carried out the tests, or were at least close to those who did so. This means we cannot use it as a reliable secondary source to verify a claim. Unless and until a reliable source is found which is completely detached from the group who carried out the tests, they should not be included. ItsZippy (talk • contributions) 16:26, 23 October 2011 (UTC)
Citizen, it would be helpful if you stopped accusing people of making personal attacks; Wvguy8258 has done no such thing. He has actually made quite a strong argument against the Canine Research website and the target of his comments has always been the reliability of the sources, not you or any other editor here.
As for the sources in question, Wvguy8258 has made a strong argument against the use of both of the sources. The research paper, in order to be reliable, needs to be published in a peer-reviewed scientific journal. If you can find evidence of this, we can use it. If you cannot, we can't use it. As Wvguy8258 points out, the AKC does seem to have quite a strong conflict of interest. A dog owners organisation commenting on legislation regarding the ownership of dogs will not be reliable. That is because, as they will be affected by such legislation, we cannot be sure of their neutrality. If you want the ATTS tests included, we really do need a peer-reviewed scientific paper. Failing that, a reliable source with no interest or involvement in dog ownership legislation may provide a possible alternative. ItsZippy (talk • contributions) 12:27, 24 October 2011 (UTC) There is currently a discussion taking place at Talk:American Staffordshire Terrier. As discussion is now taking place at the talk page, and we seem to be going in circles here, I am going to close this discussion. If you wish to continue discussing the dispute, please use the talk page, where discourse is under way. ItsZippy (talk • contributions) 12:37, 24 October 2011 (UTC)
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Wikipedia:Wikiproject Airlines
Bringing the issue here is premature; there is productive discussion taking place at the appropriate talk page. ItsZippy (talk • contributions) 14:12, 24 October 2011 (UTC) |
Closed discussion |
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Dispute overview
There has been a dipute whether or not years should be include for start dates on an airline's destination page. Users involved
Not yet.
Resolving the dispute
I started a discussion on the talk page at WP:AIRLINES but the discussion, with other editors commenting on the issue but it has not helped reached a consensus yet. A similar dispute occurred regarding years for start dates in airport article. It was discussed and consensus was reached.
Snoozlepet (talk) 18:22, 21 October 2011 (UTC) Wikipedia:Wikiproject Airlines discussionDiscussion about the issues listed above take place here. Remember to keep discussions calm, brief, and focused on the issues at hand. SUMMARY
I think that in this situation, DRN is a bit premature. I'll leave this open for another day to see if any issues have become stuck at the project talk page, but it really should be discussed there first before it's brought here. Steven Zhang The clock is ticking.... 20:08, 23 October 2011 (UTC) As some have said already, DRN at this point seems premature. There is already discussion taking place at the appropriate talk page, so DRN is not yet needed. If the dispute cannot be easily solved there, feel free to bring it back here. ItsZippy (talk • contributions) 14:12, 24 October 2011 (UTC)
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Non-Lethal Weapons
Nothing actionable here. We don't deal with conduct issues, they go to ANI. Steven Zhang |
Closed discussion |
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Dispute overview
Binkersnet has: Stalled implentation of previous Mediation and Arbitartaion decisions and attemetped to game the systemn by insterted baised material AFTER Arbitation ordered that baised matirail be ballenced; And has filed an bad-faith edit war complaint against be for removing the material in question (IAW the decision made at Arbitation). Users involved
This is a blatnat attmept to dodge both the oreder handed down at Arbitraion and diseminate a propganda. The litteral letter of Arbitration only applied to one section; However, the spirit was to apply to the entire document.
Yes.
Resolving the dispute
Throughout the talk page this has been addressed; I even requeestedd to page be locked after this particular misconduct occured (I do not know why exactly it did not happen). The decision of the Arbitration was quite clear; Biased material must be balance with the other side of the story.
Lock the page; Order those includingg the biased material to stop or ban them. (At this point, it is Binkersnet alone doing htis; BereanHunter is not being helpfull, but isn't puting the biased matterial back in.) Trying To Make Wikipedia At Least Better Than The ''Weekly World News.'' (talk) 17:06, 24 October 2011 (UTC) Non-Lethal Weapons discussionDiscussion about the issues listed above take place here. Remember to keep discussions calm, brief, and focused on the issues at hand. Comment from BinksternetI don't see any actionable proposal here, nor any substantial problem. Reddson wishes to remove sources he doesn't like and is frustrated by Wikipedia's policy for reliable sources. Binksternet (talk) 17:23, 24 October 2011 (UTC)
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United Kingdom
This is an issue with editor conduct and should be taken to ANI. ItsZippy (talk • contributions) 17:38, 25 October 2011 (UTC) |
Closed discussion |
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Dispute overview
User:MrRhythm on 23 October changed the GDP nominal and PPP rankings for the UK in the article infobox. The accepted, long-standing values of 6th and 7th are linked from the List of countries by GDP (nominal) and List of countries by GDP (PPP) respectively, where they are sourced from the World Bank, IMF, and CIA Factbook. MrRhythm is changing the values based on his own analysis of the 2011 British census. However, doing this introduces conflict both within the article (as the former values are mentioned elsewhere in the article) and with the two GDP lists themselves. Both I and User:Rangoon11 have reverted MrRhythm's edits over the past two days, but we do not wish to edit-war and want to resolve this dispute amicably. Users involved
Yes.
Resolving the dispute
I have started a discussion of the issue on the article talk page and invited MrRhythm to join there. User:Rangoon11 has joined the discussion there and agrees that the current values should stay in place for consistency and accuracy. However, MrRhythm has so far chosen not to do so, ignoring the invitation on his talk page and instead simply re-inserting his rankings into the article.
I hope that you can give advice on how to communicate with this unresponsive editor so this issue can be resolved. In his four months of editing at Wikipedia, he has never used a talk page or an edit summary. I do not wish to edit-war and am happy to discuss the issue but so far I see little sign of discussion forthcoming. NORTHUMBRIAN SPRǢC 15:32, 25 October 2011 (UTC) United Kingdom discussionDiscussion about the issues listed above take place here. Remember to keep discussions calm, brief, and focused on the issues at hand. Hi Northumbrian. Firstly, your position on the content is right - the sources do support the original content of the page and any change would require a reliable source, as opposed to the original research being provided by . I think, however, that this is less of a content dispute and more of a conduct issue, as MrRhythm has made no effort to discuss the issue and is on the verge of edit warring. Let me just thank you for your attempt to communicate with this editor, rather than taking part in an edit war; I would suggest that you take the issue to WP:ANI where an administrator can deal with the editor involved. If MrRhythm responds to your attempts to communicate, then try to discuss the issue on the talk page (and bring it back here or go to mediation). In light of that, I'm going to close this discussion. ItsZippy (talk • contributions) 17:38, 25 October 2011 (UTC)
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Depleted_uranium
Please purse other forms of dispute resolution - especially using the talk page - before bringing the issue here. ItsZippy (talk • contributions) 18:48, 25 October 2011 (UTC) |
Closed discussion |
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Dispute overview
A fairly new editor is adding in content that is clearly original research and keeps adding it in. Content summaries are becoming more fringe with each addition. Users involved
Yes.
Resolving the dispute
I've asked them to take it to talk page.
I'm unsure if this fits with 3RR or with disruptive editing or ?? PRONIZ (talk) 18:30, 25 October 2011 (UTC) Depleted_uranium discussionDiscussion about the issues listed above take place here. Remember to keep discussions calm, brief, and focused on the issues at hand. Hi there PRONIZ, thanks for posting here. I've had a look at the problem and I cannot find any evidence of you trying to discuss this with the editor. DRN should only be used once other forms of dispute resolution have been exhausted. Your first stop should be to start a discussion on the talk page with the user. If that gets nowhere, it might be worth requesting a third opinion. Only once those paths are exhausted should you bring it here. So far, all I've seen is an argument through edit summaries and the beginnings of an edit war. ItsZippy (talk • contributions) 18:48, 25 October 2011 (UTC)
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Togakure-ryū
Excellent, great to hear this has been resolved. |
Closed discussion |
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Dispute overview
When I originally came to this article, I found it like this. After working on it for a while, I turned it into this. Then User:Stvfetterly (alternate account User:GuitarStv) came along and made these changes to the article, turning it into this. I reverted him and started a discussion on the Talk page. He based his changes on these three sources. After a lot of back and forth (and a few reversions back and forth), I reverted back, but kept the Koryu Books ref in a Criticism section, so the article looked like this. We had already discussed and thrown out the MARdb source, as the site itself states in its disclaimer that it is unreliable. We are still discussing the Iga Ninja Museum source. In the middle of discussing with me, he turned the article into this. Clearly, we're not going to get anywhere from here. I have asked him multiple times to show reliable sources that state that the history of Togakure-ryu is incorrect, because then we could include them in the article, but none has been forthcoming thus far. Also, he believes that any source made by anyone related to the subject whatsoever cannot be included (for that matter, he believes that sources from the masters of the style cannot be used for anything too.) And, perplexedly, any source that discusses with, quotes, or references the masters of the style can't be used. SilverserenC 18:41, 22 October 2011 (UTC) Users involved
Yes.
Resolving the dispute
Give an opinion on the sources presented by both of us and what should be done with the article. SilverserenC 18:41, 22 October 2011 (UTC) Togakure-ryū discussionDiscussion about the issues listed above take place here. Remember to keep discussions calm, brief, and focused on the issues at hand. The Bujinkan is a large organization that has claims historical ninjitsu lineage dating back thousands of years. They have published many documents claiming this lineage, and their leader (Masaaki Hatsumi) claims to have a scroll that shows all of this (although it has never been produced for verification). This organization has a large financial motivation to make these claims. When I came to the article, the references used in it were nearly entirely published by the Bujinkan and it's subsidiaries. As an example, the following references were used in the article:
My original intention in modifying the article was to indicate that the bulk of it was written with publications of the Bujinkan, so I attempted to modify the language of the article. I also added some citation tags, and introduced some links as references to support this view. Silver Seren immediately reverted my changes claiming that they were POV. I re-added my references, and tried to make some other edits to the article including useful redirects. Silver Seren again reverted my changes. I made more modifications to the page and Silver Seren reverted these changes again for the third time, again calling my changes POV, and indicating that if the Bujinkan claims something to be true, it is. I attempted to modify my changes to the article so that they would be less POV. More reversions happened, etc. etc. Eventually Silver Seren indicated that we should not use Self Published Sources as the basis for the article. I agreed, removing sources from the Iga ninja museam (who may have a financial interest in claiming ancient ninjitsu lineage), and the Bujinkan (who have a financial interest in claiming ancient ninjitsu lineage). After removal of Bujinkan related sources, there was not much information left in the article. I've provided the following links regarding the Bujinkan's disputed lineage:
Regards, --Stvfetterly (talk) 19:10, 22 October 2011 (UTC)
So to summarize, so far in our discussions I've been told:
The preceding list contains published books, works by scholars of Japan, a publisher who deals with historical martial arts in Japan, researchers well respected in the martial arts community, and one of the single best sources for Japanese martial history (Bugei ryuha daijiten) all contain material that call the lineage of anyone claiming to be teaching historical ninjutsu into question. None of these references seem to meet SilverSaren's stringent requirements to be 'good'. Meanwhile, anything published by the Bujinkan (or any magazine articles reporting their information) is considered acceptable. In our discussions SilverSaren has claimed that if the Bujinkan says something is so, it is so. He also continue to claim to support a neutral point of view. Frankly this confuses me, as ignoring or disputing all sources not of Bujinkan origin does (at first glance) appear biased. I have no personal experience with the Bujinkan or any of their instructors / students. I have no opinion on the quality of martial art training that they offer as I have not enrolled in one of their schools. It may well be fantastic. From what I've seen, Masaaki Hatsumi is an incredibly talented martial artist. Many historical claims made by the Bujinkan organization however, are not commonly accepted. This should be pointed out in all pertinent articles to keep Wikipedia neutral and avoid bias in the articles. I would like to resolve whatever dispute SilverSaren has with me, and have come here in good faith attempting to do just that. We seem to be mired in a bickering contest now however. What exactly do you propose is done with the Togakure-Ryu article SilverSaren? Clearly a simple reversion will not suffice, as the old version is nearly entirely (at least 90%) composed of Bujinkan sources. Differentiating all Bujinkan historical claims from the history accounted for by independent third party sources in the old article is difficult without using many instances of 'claimed', 'asserted', 'according to', etc. and I understand that they can be read as POV, so that is probably not a good way to do things either. I propose that the article be reworded to focus primarily on historical facts that can be verified outside of the Bujinkan, then a separate section with maybe a paragraph or two indicating the Bujinkan historical and lineage claims. This would seem to be a reasonable compromise between having no Bujinkan sources (as now) and having predominantly Bujinkan sources (as before). Regards, --Stvfetterly (talk) 13:49, 23 October 2011 (UTC)
To start off, DRN isn't a talk page. We might have to change the rules here to limit initial discussion without input from a third party to one opening statement. Reading through walls of text right off the bat is not very inviting, and is possibly the reason why no one has looked over this yet. I will read over the discussion today and post some comments later, until then please don't add more to the discussion. Thanks. Steven Zhang The clock is ticking.... 20:27, 23 October 2011 (UTC) Note that there is older discussion about this at Wikipedia talk:WikiProject Martial arts#Togakure-ryū. jni (talk) 14:38, 24 October 2011 (UTC)
Togakure-ryū, continuedThere is quite a bit of material here. Many thanks to the editors who go through this material. jmcw (talk) 00:36, 26 October 2011 (UTC)
Please close this discussionStvfetterly and I have reached a compromise on the article. So the dispute has been resolved. SilverserenC 23:22, 28 October 2011 (UTC)
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Necromancy
Resolved. — TransporterMan (TALK) 17:42, 28 October 2011 (UTC) |
Closed discussion |
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Dispute overview
On 12 June 2011, Canstusdis added content to the article on necromancy regarding a single religious vision / spirit visitation experienced by an Elder of the LDS Church in 1877 and used that as a basis for the claim "The LDS Church believes that the dead can contact the living." Since then, this particular content has been deleted from the article by four separate users, myself (Apo-kalypso) included, only for Canstusdis to revert the edit in each instance (the first attempt I made to remove it was 30 September 2011). Given that they did not supply any rationale, I cannot speak to the others' motives for deleting this content, but for my part, I stated: 1) the incident did not fit the definition of necromancy as it is outlined in the article, 2) the cited source was not reliable, 3) neither incident nor source supported a general inference as to the contemporary LDS Church's stance on such phenomenon, making any claim along these lines original research, and 4) associating a purported belief of the LDS Church with the practice of necromancy – which the LDS Church clearly repudiates – can potentially be read as defamation. Apparently dissatisfied with my rationale, Canstusdis restored the content and called upon me to initiate a discussion on the article talk page instead; I did so on 10 October 2011. We have now reached the point where Canstusdis is actually proposing to change the article's definition of its own subject in order to accommodate inclusion of the disputed content, which I think crosses the line in all sorts of directions. Users involved
Jean Calleo became involved in the talk page discussion as a third party on her own initiative.
Yes.
Resolving the dispute
Starting 10 October 2011, I have undertaken to engage Canstusdis in a discussion on the article talk page, and Jean Calleo interceded with a third opinion (it did not come about as the result of a formal request, however) in support of my position on the issue, but after continuing to exchange several posts with Canstusdis, I find myself increasingly concerned about the character and course his participation is assuming in this discussion; in particular, his recent troubling proposal of a by-any-means-necessary solution to retain the disputed content in the article, content which clearly does not belong there in the first place.
Please direct me to a means of resolving this dispute, whether here or elsewhere on Wikipedia. I would very much like to arrive at a reasonable consensus decision as how to move forward with the article. Apo-kalypso (talk) 04:57, 24 October 2011 (UTC) Necromancy discussionDiscussion about the issues listed above take place here. Remember to keep discussions calm, brief, and focused on the issues at hand.
Any kind of divination and especially necromancy are associated with (black) magic(k) and witchcraft; simply being contacted by the dead does not instantly qualify as necromancy, just like worshiping ancestors' spirits doesn't qualify and just like seeing ghosts doesn't qualify. — Jean Calleo (talk) 12:09, 24 October 2011 (UTC)
I am a mediator at this noticeboard. I am not affiliated in any way with either spiritualism or the LDS Church, both broadly construed, and am indeed a self-proclaimed skeptic (see my user page) as to such matters. The issue is over this edit.
The information in the edit is not appropriate for the article. Regards, TransporterMan (TALK) 18:16, 24 October 2011 (UTC)
Enough. Stop talking about one another. Limit your comments to the content issues, without personal comments. Unless someone has something more to say about the content issue, I'm prepared to close this discussion with my opinion and recommendation against the inclusion of the material for the reasons I stated above. Regards, TransporterMan (TALK) 18:39, 26 October 2011 (UTC)
TransporterMan has already interjected with his opinion as a mediator here; as a fellow mediator (and as someone with no connection to the LDS Church whatsoever), I shall do the same. Canstusdis has taken a source which mentions Elder Wilford Woodruff's vision and gone on to suggest that the LDS Church as a whole believes in necromancy. This is synthesis of the source, so cannot be used. Unless a reliable source can be provided which explicitly states that the LDS believes in necromancy, the LDS should be left out of the article. As for the definition of necromancy, previous editors have provided swathes of sources to support the current definition. Thus, I see no reason to change it. I urge all involved in this dispute to remain civil and focus their posts on the content and arguments, rather than each other. Any posts which question the motives and conduct of other editors instead of the content issue are unhelpful. As TransporterMan said, if this continues, the discussion will be closed. Furthermore, unless Canstusdis has any further contributions to make, which have not been raised and addressed already, I suggest the discussion is closed with the resolution that Canstusdis' proposed changes are kept out of the article. ItsZippy (talk • contributions) 18:55, 26 October 2011 (UTC) It seems that the issue has been resolved. Would there be any objections to the closure of this discussion now? ItsZippy (talk • contributions) 11:55, 28 October 2011 (UTC)
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