Wikipedia:Deletion review/Log/2010 November 8

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8 November 2010

  • San Vaknin – Allow recreation (see comments at bottom of discussion) – C.Fred (talk) 15:26, 9 November 2010 (UTC)[reply]
The following is an archived debate of the deletion review of the page above. Please do not modify it.
Sam Vaknin (talk|edit|history|logs|links|watch) (XfD|restore)

I think that the deletion of Sam Vaknin - should be overturned as:

  • there is no question that Sam Vaknin is notable (currently with 64,600 ghits and see also [1][2][3][4])[5]). His notability is continually increasing over time. (Compare with Chris Williams (cricketer, born 1983) a cricketer whose only claim to fame is that he played in a single professional cricket match).
  • the proposer of the AFD was permanently banned user User:Zeraeph whose forceful opinions seem to have also influenced the vote of others. I also suspect that User:Senihele and User:72.16.41.16 were sockpuppets of hers. It was an established fact that User:Zeraeph did use sockpuppets from time to time (she admitted it) and she even has an associated IP range block.
  • the vote was far from unanimous with 3 voting to keep.

I only stumbled upon the AFD quite recently. It seems that several attempts have since been made to recreate Sam Vaknin including administrator User:Eugene van der Pijll.

I have not had a response from administrator User:Johnleemk who closed the AFD. His account now seems to be semi-dormant.

Administrator

User:Penbat/Sam Vaknin
mainly from the high quality press.

I have no problem with somebody starting a new AFD on my new version

User:Penbat/Sam Vaknin but it is only fair that the slate is wiped clean and the old AFD is disregarded. Penbat (talk) 19:12, 8 November 2010 (UTC)[reply
]

  • Endorse original AfD. Since the issue raised is the original AfD, I don't see how it can be proven that a deletion that has stood for four years was improperly closed or biased in the course of discussion. That said, I restored the article to Penbat's user space to see if it could be improved. There were secondary references in place at the time of the AfD; I do not see where any new sources have been added. Since the article would be speedy deletable under criterion
    G4
    , I recommend that the draft remain in userspace until additional clear assertions of notability are made.
As an additional point of information, the version I deleted on 18 October 2010 was not the same version that was restored to Penbat's userspace. The version I deleted then was so short with so little assertion of significance that it could have been speedy deleted under criterion
A7 as well as G4. —C.Fred (talk) 19:21, 8 November 2010 (UTC) amended 01:17, 9 November 2010 (UTC)[reply
]
  • Comment This is complete nonsense. There were plenty of secondary sources in the 2006 AFD version anyway but i have added plenty more secondary sources including:
  • I, Psychopath CBC Newsworld May 20 2009
  • Global Politician Editors
  • International Analyst Network
  • Project Gutenberg - books by Sam Vaknin
  • Adrian Tempany When narcissism becomes pathological Financial Times September 4 2010
  • Barack Obama - Narcissist or Merely Narcissistic? Global Politician 8/13/2008
  • James Lewis Obama's Malignant Narcissism American Thinker March 04, 2010]
  • Woolaston, Sam Last night's TV The Guardian, Tuesday February 6, 2007
  • Yvonne Roberts The monster in the mirror The Sunday Times September 16, 2007
  • Fenichel, Otto (1938). "The Drive to Amass Wealth". Psychoanalytic Quarterly. 7: 69–95.
--Penbat (talk) 20:01, 8 November 2010 (UTC)[reply]
  • Allow Recreation The userspace version of the article makes a credible claim of notability backed by reliable and verifiable sources. The result of the previous AfD appears to be moot at this point. Alansohn (talk) 23:39, 8 November 2010 (UTC)[reply]
  • Yup, I'm with Alansohn in this instance. The 2006 deletion seems to have been closed correctly but its finding that Sam Vaknin is non-notable can't continue to stand in the face of sources like this from 2010. Move the userspace draft into mainspace. However, I do recommend removing the "controversies and rebuttals" section entirely. That's a magnet for BLP problems. His criticisms of Wikipedia should remain in the article, though.—S Marshall T/C 23:57, 8 November 2010 (UTC)[reply]
  • Thank you for pointing out the FT article; I missed that one. —C.Fred (talk) 01:17, 9 November 2010 (UTC)[reply]
  • Allow recreation per Marshal and Alan. JoshuaZ (talk) 04:10, 9 November 2010 (UTC)[reply]
  • Comment on "Controversies and rebuttals" section - I can see some arguments for retaining it, deleting it could be counterproductive and Vaknin's rebuttal is clearly signposted. Probably best discussed on article talk page.--Penbat (talk) 10:46, 9 November 2010 (UTC)[reply]
  • Allow recreation. Sources in the userspace draft definitely show notability per
    WP:BASIC. Will need to be pretty highly watched for BLP issues, but so do many others. Alzarian16 (talk) 13:43, 9 November 2010 (UTC)[reply
    ]
The above is an archive of the deletion review of the page listed in the heading. Please do not modify it.
The following is an archived debate of the deletion review of the page above. Please do not modify it.
User:Geo Swan/Guantanamo/Abdul Zahir charges (talk|edit|history|logs|links|watch) (restore)
This was deleted as an
WP:CSD#G10. I think the original page, an official charge sheet, ended up on this user-page through a good faith mistake on my part -- as it was material that would have been completely compliant for inclusion on wikisource, and would have been more useful there. When the page was drawn to my attention I immediately transwikied it to wikisource. At the old page I left a link to the new wikisourced version, and a list of terms mentioned in the charge sheet. I did this because I thought these were all terms that might, potentially, merit a reference to wikisourced page. I planned to look at each one, later, and decide whether I thought they merited that reference.

The deletion log says the deleting administrator explained the reason for their deletion on my talk page. That would be this comment. Not putting this page at wikisource in the first place was a mistake. That is where it belonged. That is where it would have been more useful. Why the admin thinks I would have purposely limited the usefulness of a page by putting it on the wrong WMF project page is beyond me. I dispute the admin′s characterization that I was being disingenious. The admin did not address my justification for how I planned to use the last version of the page. I think the purpose I said I was going to use the page for was completely compliant with WP:User pages, and all our other policies, guidelines and conventions. For what it is worth I told the administrator in question that I was concerned that their emotions seemed to be too involved, and I requested them to take off their administrator hat when addressing concerns they have with material I have contributed. They have declined, even to the extent of declining to email me the last version of pages they deleted. Geo Swan (talk) 19:00, 8 November 2010 (UTC)[reply

]

I suggest that if Osama bin Laden really did issue a statement entitled "The Nuclear Bomb of Islam" that it is not unreasonable to consider whether we should have an article on that title. I think it is reasonable to consider this even if it was now widely believed he had not issued this statement, but sufficient RS had once asserted he did in sufficient detail to support an article, just as we cover the flat-earth theory, even though no one believes in the flat earth anymore. Having a redlink to a significant document does not merit uncollegial mockery.
  • If I understand the deleting admin's comment they may be arguing that since they thought it lay within their authority to delete an earlier version of this page, they were still entitled to delete any subsequent versions of this page, even if their concerns had been addressed. Geo Swan (talk) 23:40, 8 November 2010 (UTC)[reply]
You again do not understand my comment, no. I did not claim that only the earlier version of the page was BLPdeletable, the version I actually deleted was also speedy deletable. I have highlighted in my response to DGG below the most explicit parts of the BLP policy which were the reason for this deletion. My reference to the redlinks like "the nuclear bomb of Islam" have nothing to do with "uncollegial mockery", and everything to do with the reason this page wa deleted. Please consider for once that these deletions are not about you, but about the deleted pages. You state that "I suggest that if Osama bin Laden really did issue a statement entitled "
Fram (talk) 08:45, 9 November 2010 (UTC)[reply
]
  • Note also that Geo Swan's claim "When the page was drawn to my attention I immediately transwikied it to wikisource." is false: the Wikisource page [6] did not only exist long before this deletion or before I noted the page on hus user talk, but even already a few minutes before the page on Wikipedia was created. This was simply a fork of a Wikisource page, violating BLP, as the deleted version, to a lesser extent, clearly still did.
    Fram (talk) 19:58, 8 November 2010 (UTC)[reply
    ]
  • Restore The basis of BLP policy is to do no harm, as well as the general principle of fairness. Supposing a person completely innocent of any hostile act were detained in Gitmo. In what possible sense can an article here citing the official allegations against him, however unfounded or mistaken, however excessive, do him harm, or be unfair to him? The harm that may have been done to him, the unfairness of his case, will not have come from Wikipedia. If anything, publicity may possibly help him. Consider someone actually guilty of war crimes, similarly detained and charged. Again, how is Wikipedia doing harm? . The deletion of articles like this is a perversion of BLP, the use of the BLP policy to harm someone and promote the unfairness to him. I find it really hard to imagine how anyone in this position would be other than helped by the publishing of the information of the charges. Those who think them heros will do so and continue acting accordingly ; those who think them innocent martyrs will do so, and continue acting accordingly, those who consider them guilty of horrible crimes will continue to do so, those who have hostile and malign prejudices against them will continue to have them. The Wikipedia article might possible do good, and can do no evil. I find it hard to understand the perspective of those who apply BLP to this situation--either they do not believe their own arguments, and actually wish to harm the people by hiding information, or they are seeing matters of good and evil in a way that I consider to have no positive correlation with reality or humanity. DGG ( talk ) 06:18, 9 November 2010 (UTC)[reply]
    • Your comments are not based in policy. We have an article,
      Fram (talk) 08:45, 9 November 2010 (UTC)[reply
      ]
you are wikilawering by using literal reading of the wording to do an action contrary to the intent: the intent is "do no harm" — not "do no good". To explain, NPOV and V are the bases of encyclopedic article writing, but BLP is the one place at Wikipedia where there is firm consensus that we deviate slightly from literal NPOV by requiring stricter sourcing for one aspect of the material than the other. By themselves, NPOV & V mean that we cover the subject in a way that tells the truth from all aspects. Add BLP into it, and we tell the truth, but not necessarily the whole truth.(Some of us objected to this aspect of our BLP policy on exactly the grounds that it compromised NPOV, but the consensus was that we do make this compromise, essentially out of common decency. As I recall, Fram, you have argued very strongly for this.) We limit what we include so as to come as close to NPOV as possible, while still doing the least harm. In other words, we deliberately bias the coverage of materials on living individuals to avoid the possibility of harming their interests, except when it's a supervening matter of public interest, or their interests cannot be substantially harmed. (Fram, I think you agree with me so far.)
What harms an individual, or, worse, harms an individually unfairly? Normally, our assumption is that it is information linking the individual to something disreputable, most particularly a crime, and very most particularly a crime that he has not been convicted of. This accounts well for all normal situations. There have been some situations where the BLPs have however accepted, (or even desired, and sometimes strongly promoted) publicity for their disreputable or criminal actions; either because they think their actions justified, or because they think that taken together with surrounding events it shows them in a good light overall; or because they think they have been persecuted and wish to draw attention to their situation. This has come up in various contexts, and it has been generally accepted that when adults accept or court publicity for the negative material in question, it is absurd for us to "protect" them from disclosure of it.
In this particular instance , I do not think we know the explicit desires of the subject, but in essentially all known analogous cases of people detained at GITMO we do: they want publicity. Sometimes, they are proud of the deeds that are being called crimes. But almost always, they hope that disclosure of their case will lead to support for them and perhaps even to freedom. This can be proven by looking at who has sought since the opening of Gitmo to deny them publicity--the US Government, their accuser, and their enemy. The subjects of this group of articles have fought for years for some information to be provided of their situation, and the US government has persistently resisted providing more than the public opinion of the world--and some court decision--have forced them to provide. So what is to their interest? What does no harm? What might even do the subjects of these articles good? It is you, Fram, and those who share your position, who are the ones trying to use the rules meant to protect them to have the effect of harming them. DGG ( talk ) 04:49, 10 November 2010 (UTC)[reply]
That's a novel one, wikilawyering by using the very explicit wording of the policy, even as it stands in the lead. DGG, you are wrong. The lead of the policy clearly explains that contentious material should be immediately removed, even if the material is positive. How do you rhyme this with your "the intent is "do no harm" — not "do no good". " So, no, when you end your first paragraph with "(Fram, I think you agree with me so far.)", I have already stopped analyzing yiour further TLDR arguments, as I don't even agree with your first sentences. If you would avoid things like "it has been generally accepted that when adults accept or court publicity for the negative material in question, it is absurd for us to "protect" them from disclosure of it.", which have nothing to do with the discussion at hand, it would become easier to find your actual arguments why the policy doesn't apply in this case. All I read in your reply is that it is good for this BLP to have a onesided POVfork where all kinds of terrorism-related terms are linked to his name, since this may be a good thing for him. Even if you are right about the outcome of this BLPviolating POVfork, it is still an unacceptable article-like use of the userspace. If you feel that our coverage of this person is not fair, balanced, BLPcompliant, then go and change the article we have on him, but don't support policy-violating pages with your very one-sided cherrypicking of the spirit of the policy.
Fram (talk) 08:10, 10 November 2010 (UTC)[reply
]
  • Overturn the deletion -- echoing the reasons given by Jclemens. Writing as someone who's frequently disagreed with GeoSwan, I'll say that he's the last person I would ever accuse of doing an attack page. This is really a case of someone getting all his ducks in a row before putting something in an article. I'm astounded that it could be deleted without a second thought. -- Randy2063 (talk) 19:00, 12 November 2010 (UTC)[reply]
  • Endorse -- Wikipedia is not:
    WP:IDHT. -- IQinn (talk) 00:11, 13 November 2010 (UTC)[reply
    ]
The above is an archive of the deletion review of the page listed in the heading. Please do not modify it.
  • User:Geo Swan/Guantanamo/Brookings lists of released captives – I have emailed Geo Swan the portions of his user page which were not an exact copy of bits of the study. I do not comment on whether or not the page was in fact a copyright violation, but regardless there is no reason he cannot use the study itself rather than the wiki-code for his own purposes. – lifebaka++ 01:25, 10 November 2010 (UTC)[reply]
The following is an archived debate of the deletion review of the page above. Please do not modify it.
User:Geo Swan/Guantanamo/Brookings lists of released captives (talk|edit|history|logs|links|watch) (restore)
This user page was deleted as a lapse from
de minimus. I like to think of myself as careful. I′d like to think I am generally careful enough that I wouldn′t make that kind of mistake. I know I am capable of error. I think it is reasonable for me to see what I uploaded for myself, to see how much I lapsed.

I use the pages I create in user-space. If the only problem with this material is some footnotes, maybe I can trim those footnotes and use the uncopyrightable remainder somewhere. Alternately, maybe it wouldn′t be worth the effort. I′d like to see for myself. Geo Swan (talk) 20:44, 8 November 2010 (UTC)[reply

]

The source is [7], as indicated in the deletion summary, which you see when you go to the redlink. The problem is not with "some footnotes", and I don't know where you got that idea. I also did not claim that I would not send you any deleted material, I refused to send you any material deleted for
Fram (talk) 21:11, 8 November 2010 (UTC)[reply
]
  • Yes, the deletion log points to [8]. This deletion log is of no use to a good faith contributor, like myself, who would like to see for themselves how their challenger thinks they lapsed from policy. You write above that
    de minimus
    , and is copyrightable.
  • You write “I also don't believe that any study which draws conclusions, i.e. not only reports facts, is copyrightfree contentwise, even ignoring the copies of remarks, layout...” A document can contain portions that are copyrightable and portions that are not copyrightable. If a document included a PD image, that image would remain PD. If a document contained passages from the Declaration of Independence, of the NYC phone book, those passages would remain uncopyrightable.
  • De minimus
    is a low bar. Should I have included pages 85 to 90... In addition to collating in the titles of other documents the final column of those entries adds phrases, like “ISN and nationality match. Imperfect name match”. It uses half a dozen phrases like that. For my purposes one of the most useful parts of those lists is the collation of the captives names with the title of their habeas corpus. Those half dozen, or dozen phrases could all be excised, or replaced with “matches partially” and the list would be just as useful for my purposes.
  • As I wrote above I am concerned over how you interpret WP:User pages. As I wrote in the DRV above this one, WP:User pages, says, several times, that contributors are allowed greater leeway in userspace than in article space. But you seem intent on requiring the userspace pages I use to measure up to a higher standard than we require in article space. When articles are nominated for deletion, and any real policy lapses that triggered the nomination are addressed, the article is kept. However, you seem to be arguing that any userspace material I contributed that triggered your concern has to be deleted, it cannot be fixed.
  • If, for the sake of argument, those half dozen or dozen phrases, rose to de minibus, excising them, or replacing them with “matches partially”, would make the page compliant. Geo Swan (talk) 05:36, 9 November 2010 (UTC)[reply]
Fram (talk) 08:55, 9 November 2010 (UTC)[reply
]
  • Endorse (speedy close) - Wikipedia is not:
    WP:NOTBUREAUCRACY. -- IQinn (talk) 21:24, 9 November 2010 (UTC)][reply
    ]
The above is an archive of the deletion review of the page listed in the heading. Please do not modify it.