Talk:842 (compression algorithm)

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"Too closely associated" tag

User:MarioGom has added a Third-party "too closely associated" tag to this article. I created the article and think that assessment is unfair.

Sources cited in the article were written by people with knowledge of the algorithm. Of course.

The article is about an algorithm, a mathematical statement of steps to solve a problem. The article cites an academic paper with a more detailed description of the algorithm. The algorithm per se is not something anyone would want to promote or sockpuppet.

I suspect MarioGom's problem is that the algorithm has been implemented in a product by IBM. The article mentions IBM in one sentence. 3 out of 8 sources are from that company - 2 from their research publications, and only one from product documentation. Who else is going to document the capabilities of the IBM processor? Should I remove those citations merely because they come from a company? Should I remove any mention of a product that implements the algorithm? Should mentions of a product be uncited?

I assure you I have no connection with IBM, with the authors of the academic papers cited, or with the authors of the implementation of the algorithm in the Linux kernel. I wrote this article because when I first encountered a mention of the 842 algorithm, I had no idea what it was. I looked it up on Wikipedia, and there was nothing there. So I did a bit of research and wrote the article. Isn't that what Wikipedia is for?

I think the article is fine as it stands and the "too closely associated" tag should be removed. If you have specific objections to the article, please edit it or detail problems you see. Paul Foxworthy (talk) 00:10, 7 October 2021 (UTC)[reply]

Hi
general notability guideline for the explanation on the relation between reliable independent sources and notability. If there is any doubt about any of this, I'm happy to answer further doubts. For what it's worth, there is no problem with IBM, and the mentions of the product should not be uncited. MarioGom (talk) 07:24, 7 October 2021 (UTC)[reply
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