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This is the '''discussion''' page for [[Wikipedia:Good article nominations|good article nominations]] (GAN) and the [[Wikipedia:Good articles|good articles process]] in general. To ask a question or start a discussion about the good article nomination process, click the Add topic link above. Please check and see if your question may already be answered; click the link to the Frequently asked questions below or search the Archives below. If you are here to discuss concerns with a specific review, please consider discussing things with the reviewer first before posting here.
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* [[/Archive 1|18 March 2006 - 15 April 2006]]
{{central|text=several other GA talk pages redirect here.}}
* [[/Archive 2|15 April 2006 - June 3 2006]]
* [[/Archive 3|April 2006 - Jun 2006]]
* [[/Archive 4|Jun 2006 - Aug 2006]]
* [[/Archive 5|Sept 2006 - April 2007]]
* [[/Archive 6|April 2007 - July 2007]]
* [[/Archive 7|July 2007 - September 2007]]
* [[/Archive 8|September 2007 -]]
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GA: [[Wikipedia talk:Good articles/Archive 1|1]], [[Wikipedia talk:Good articles/Archive 2|2]], [[Wikipedia talk:Good articles/Archive 3|3]], [[Wikipedia talk:Good articles/Archive 4|4]], [[Wikipedia talk:Good articles/Archive 5|5]], [[Wikipedia talk:Good articles/Archive 6|6]], [[Wikipedia talk:Good articles/Archive 7|7]], [[Wikipedia talk:Good articles/Archive 8|8]], [[Wikipedia talk:Good articles/Archive 9|9]], [[Wikipedia talk:Good articles/Archive 10|10]], [[Wikipedia talk:Good articles/Archive 11|11]], [[Wikipedia talk:Good articles/Archive 12|12]], [[Wikipedia talk:Good articles/Archive 13|13]], [[Wikipedia talk:Good articles/Archive 14|14]], [[Wikipedia talk:Good articles/Archive 15|15]], [[Wikipedia talk:Good articles/Archive 16|16]]


Criteria: [[Wikipedia talk:Good article criteria/Archive 1|1]], [[Wikipedia talk:Good article criteria/Archive 2|2]], [[Wikipedia talk:Good article criteria/Archive 3|3]], [[Wikipedia talk:Good article criteria/Archive 4|4]]
== Simultaneously GA and A-class? ==


Reassessment: [[Wikipedia talk:Good article reassessment/archive1|1]], [[Wikipedia talk:Good article reassessment/archive2|2]], [[Wikipedia talk:Good article reassessment/archive3|3]], [[Wikipedia talk:Good article reassessment/archive4|4]], [[Wikipedia talk:Good article reassessment/archive5|5]], [[Wikipedia talk:Good article reassessment/archive6|6]]
Recently [[24: The Game]] and [[Battle of Gettysburg, First Day]] were nominated (by the same editor, kaypoh). However, both are already A-class articles. When I inguired on the talk page of 24: The Game, I was told that an article could be a GA and A-class article at the same time. Is that true?


GA help: [[Wikipedia:Good article help/Archive 1|1]], [[Wikipedia:Good article help/Archive 2|2]]
It doesn't seem too logical to me, as an A-class article is supposed to be judged with higher standards than a GA article. [[User:Noble Story|Noble Story]] ([[User talk:Noble Story|talk]]) 15:05, 29 March 2008 (UTC)


Nominations/Instructions: [[Wikipedia talk:Good article nominations/Instructions/Archive 1|1]]
: The Stub, Start, B, GA, A, FA-Class system is a rating system run by individual WikiProjects. There is no requirement that different WikiProjects should give an article the same rating and WikiProjects have their own schemes for designating articles as A-Class: typically these schemes concentrate on the quality of the content, so articles can be A-Class without being [[WP:GA|good articles]]. Similarly GA-Class is a WikiProject rating which just happens to coincide ''most of the time'' with whether the article is a [[WP:GA|good article]] or not. Please try to discourage editors from using "GA-Class" as a synonym for [[WP:GA|good article]]; this will help to avoid this confusion arising. The two concepts are logically distinct, and sometimes differ in practice. ''[[User talk:Geometry guy|Geometry guy]]'' 15:30, 29 March 2008 (UTC)
::Articles at [[WP:MILHIST]] are frequently both GAs and A-Class at the same time, but they also usually become FAs rather quickly as well. For example, here are two GAs under [[WP:MARITIME]] which are also A-Class: [[Benjamin Franklin Tilley]] and {{USS|Siboney|ID-2999}}. -'''[[User:MBK004|MBK]]'''<sub>[[User talk:MBK004|004]]</sub> 21:57, 29 March 2008 (UTC)


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For the other wikiprojects that I participate in, I usually treat A-class as sort of a GA+ rating. I think that all A-class articles should meet, at a minimum, the [[WP:WIAGA|GA criteria]], and then go above and beyond, providing additional details and fulfilling a more subject area based assessment. They should mostly be meeting the [[WP:WIAFA|FA criteria]] as well, but obviously don't have to meet all of them. As such, I don't have a problem with articles being listed as GA and also assessed as A-class by one of their wikiprojects. But I do have a problem with A-class assessments on articles that do not meet the [[WP:WIAGA|GA criteria]] and are not listed at [[WP:GA]]. [[User:Derek.cashman|Dr. Cash]] ([[User talk:Derek.cashman|talk]]) 17:56, 31 March 2008 (UTC)
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:I'm afraid I GA nom'ed [[Jack the Ripper]] purely 'cause it was listed as A-class and there was no way it could meet GA criteria. It failed and is now more reasonably a B-Class. Cheers! [[User:Wassupwestcoast|Wassupwestcoast]] ([[User talk:Wassupwestcoast|talk]]) 18:22, 31 March 2008 (UTC)
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:: Please don't change WikiProject A-Class ratings to B for failed GAs. This is a matter for the WikiProject: leave a note on the WikiProject talk page. A better mental picture (although this is still a simplification, for the reasons I mentioned above) for the structure of article assessment is:
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:: For many WikiProjects, A-Class is a content decision, based on comprehensiveness: it does not cover minutiae of presentation. It is not our job at GA to tell WikiProjects how to do their job. ''[[User talk:Geometry guy|Geometry guy]]'' 19:40, 31 March 2008 (UTC)
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:::Absolutely agree with that. In just the same way that it's not for a GA reviewer to re-assess an article's project allocated B-class to GA if (s)he decides to list it. That's down to how each project interprets its own GA assessment. --[[User:Malleus Fatuarum|Malleus Fatuorum]] ([[User talk:Malleus Fatuarum|talk]]) 19:51, 31 March 2008 (UTC)
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::::So which project takes precedence when there are four or five banner tags on the talk page? Seriously, other than military history and maybe film, which projects have active assessment 'departments'. Nine out of ten times, A-class is a vanity class given by a contributing editor. And, quite often that contributing editor is long gone. In the case of [[Jack the Ripper]], it seems the active contributors agreed with the down grade. Cheers! [[User:Wassupwestcoast|Wassupwestcoast]] ([[User talk:Wassupwestcoast|talk]]) 20:39, 31 March 2008 (UTC)
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:::::No project "takes precedence", as Geometry Guy's little graphic was meant to demonstrate. The GA process has absolutely nothing to do with whatever any project may choose to call GA, other than having (perhaps unhelpfully) the same name. --[[User:Malleus Fatuarum|Malleus Fatuorum]] ([[User talk:Malleus Fatuarum|talk]]) 20:55, 31 March 2008 (UTC)

:::::Each individual WikiProject banner is the responsibility of the WikiProject which created it. Anyone can change any banner, but WikiProject assessments are reached by consensus of those interested in the article from the point of view of the WikiProject. It is completely reasonable for different WikiProjects to have different assessments for the same article (see e.g. [[Talk:John von Neumann]], which is great as a Game theory article, not comprehensive as a mathematics article, and needing further work as a biography). Remember: WikiProject assessments are for editors, not readers; they help editors keep track of and improve article quality. ''[[User talk:Geometry guy|Geometry guy]]'' 20:58, 31 March 2008 (UTC)

== Is this an acceptable GA review ==

[http://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=Talk%3ALeo_Fortune-West&diff=201891017&oldid=201327932 Is it?] It doesn't seem to of been reviewed properly to me. [[User:D.M.N.|D.M.N.]] ([[User talk:D.M.N.|talk]]) 21:17, 29 March 2008 (UTC)

: The article is pretty awful: half of it is references! I suggest you delist it following the [[WP:Good article reassessment/guidelines#delist|delisting guidelines]]: in the case of this article, [[WP:WIAGA#What is a good article?|criterion 3(a)]] (broadness) clearly fails because this biographical article only discusses the subject's sporting career. If you run into problems delisting the article, use [[WP:GAR]]. ''[[User talk:Geometry guy|Geometry guy]]'' 21:39, 29 March 2008 (UTC)
::I have to disagree with this article being "pretty awful". I find that insulting to the work I placed into it and as being very unfair. Also, there are plenty of football GAs which do not cover aspects of the subject not related to their sporting career, with an example including the newly-promoted [[Michael Symes]]. The criteria itself states "articles that do not necessarily outline every part of the topic". [[User:Mattythewhite|Mattythewhite]] ([[User talk:Mattythewhite|talk]]) 22:04, 29 March 2008 (UTC)
:::The article you cite is possibly worse. I suspect these articles were passed because they meet [[WP:V]]. However, GA is not a citation check. [[WP:V]] is an absolute policy requirement, which all articles must meet. GA is a broad assessment in terms of the [[WP:WIAGA|good article criteria]]. This may have been misunderstood in the past, and such misunderstandings may continue. Your work is great, and it is no insult to it that it does not currently meet the good article criteria. Good luck improving the article further. ''[[User talk:Geometry guy|Geometry guy]]'' 22:21, 29 March 2008 (UTC)
::::It's not that it failed GA I find insulting, but the manner in which you described it. I mean, the article describes the whole career of Leo Fortune-West to a fairly comprehensive degree, I fail to see how it makes it "pretty awful". As you implied, it's not particularly long, but I don't believe that is a requirement of GA. Just that it "addresses the major aspects of the topic", which I believe it is successful in. This goes into further detail by stating "articles that do not necessarily outline every part of the topic", meaning it is not a necessity for it to go into detail on his non-sporting career. [[User:Mattythewhite|Mattythewhite]] ([[User talk:Mattythewhite|talk]]) 23:54, 29 March 2008 (UTC)
:::::I apologise for my choice of words. ''[[User talk:Geometry guy|Geometry guy]]'' 09:06, 30 March 2008 (UTC)
:It was not reviewed properly at all and clearly fails GA. I was tempted to just revert it, but instead have delisted and left a note about the improper review on the talk page. [[User:Collectonian|Collectonian]] ([[User talk:Collectonian|talk]]) 21:53, 29 March 2008 (UTC)
::I think you should give a proper review so Mattybywhite knows what he must do to improve the article so it can be a GA next time. --[[User:Kaypoh|Kaypoh]] ([[User talk:Kaypoh|talk]]) 09:20, 30 March 2008 (UTC)
:::Its already been delisted. I'd recommend they start with a peer review before renominating it. [[User:Collectonian|Collectonian]] ([[User talk:Collectonian|talk]]) 09:38, 30 March 2008 (UTC)
Hey guys, sorry about that review. I haven't done to many reviews yet, and I guess I need to re-read the criteria, because after a second look, I see that this article should not have passed the way I passed it. I apologize for this. <font face=jokerman>[[User:iMatthew|<font color=red>'''iMat'''</font>]][[User talk:iMatthew|<font color=orange>'''thew'''</font>]] [[Special:Contributions/iMatthew|<font color=blue>'''20'''</font>]][[User:iMatthew/Guestbook|<font color=green>'''08'''</font>]]</font> 22:27, 29 March 2008 (UTC)
:Don't worry too much. After this baptism by fire, you will be one of GA's best reviewers, I am sure! Good luck! ''[[User talk:Geometry guy|Geometry guy]]'' 22:36, 29 March 2008 (UTC)
::I had similar concerns about the [[Talk:Kenwyne Jones#GA Review (2)|GA review]] of [[Kenwyne Jones]] and put that up for GAR, but it's been passed. At least Jones' article does go into some of his background.
::I have to agree with Mattythewhite and agree with some of Geometry Guy's wording. "Pretty awful" doesn't really beat around the bush. It's a very damming verdict even if you didn't quite mean to use those words. [[User:Peanut4|Peanut4]] ([[User talk:Peanut4|talk]]) 10:12, 30 March 2008 (UTC)
:::But still, I'm not quite sure how it fails criterion 3. It reads "addresses the major aspects of the topic", which it has done by documenting his sporting career. It also reads "articles that do not necessarily outline every part of the topic", telling that it is not necessary for it to detail his non-sporting career. [[User:Mattythewhite|Mattythewhite]] ([[User talk:Mattythewhite|talk]]) 11:58, 30 March 2008 (UTC)
::::::Like I said, I'm just starting to review articles, and I see that this is '''not''' the way to do it. I've re-read the GA criteria, and I will review another article in the near future. <font face=jokerman>[[User:iMatthew|<font color=red>'''iMat'''</font>]][[User talk:iMatthew|<font color=orange>'''thew'''</font>]] [[Special:Contributions/iMatthew|<font color=blue>'''20'''</font>]][[User:iMatthew/Guestbook|<font color=green>'''08'''</font>]]</font> 17:58, 30 March 2008 (UTC)
:::::::I'm not commenting on your reviweing, I'm just trying to find out how it exactly fails GA. [[User:Mattythewhite|Mattythewhite]] ([[User talk:Mattythewhite|talk]]) 18:11, 30 March 2008 (UTC)

::::::::The most obvious shortcomings are with respect to criteria 1a and 3a. For instance: "He again gained with the promotion with the side in 2002–03 after they won the play-offs"; "He was to be offered a new deal in April and finished the season with seven goals in 28 appearances." So far as 3a is concerned, it is difficult to argue that a biography that doesn't include any biographical detail meets the broadness requirement. I'd suggest peer review and/or a request to the League of Copyeditors as the next step for this article. --[[User:Malleus Fatuarum|Malleus Fatuorum]] ([[User talk:Malleus Fatuarum|talk]]) 18:47, 30 March 2008 (UTC)

== Odd method of reviewing ==

I stumbled across this situation and thought I would bring it up here for broader input (am also notifying the editor in question). [[User:Noble Story|Noble Story]] does GA reviews in [[User:Noble Story/sandbox]], with just a link to the sandbox from the article talk page. When the GA review is done, the sandbox is cleared and used for the next review(s), so that someone looking for the GA review details would have to dig through the sandbox history. This defeats the purpose of having the GA review on the article talk page. Such reviews are helpful for future editors and for things like FAC.

Specific example: [[Stuart McCall]] is a GA, but on [[Talk:Stuart McCall]] there is a very minimal review and a link to the sandbox. This was blanked here [http://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=User:Noble_Story/sandbox&diff=prev&oldid=199746233 diff] to add the review for [[History of Bradford City A.F.C.]], which is also now gone.

I also wonder about the level of changes being asked for relative to GA criteria. While it is clear Noble Story is a careful, thorough and detailed reviewer, I think this practice of doing reviews in the sandbox has to stop. I also think the complete reviews have to be "dug up" and put in their article talk pages. Looks like there are 11 articles to date [[http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/User:Noble_Story/Good_Article_Reviews]].

I also think the directions need to be made more explicit as to reviews being done in the article talk page only. [[User:Ruhrfisch|Ruhrfisch]] '''[[User talk:Ruhrfisch|<sub><font color="green">&gt;&lt;&gt;</font></sub><small>&deg;</small><sup><small>&deg;</small></sup>]]''' 16:46, 1 April 2008 (UTC)


== splitting the world history sections ==
: I agree with everything you said. I brought this up with NS in regards to [[Portland Trail Blazers]], but did not pursue it too hard. But I do think it should be made clear that reviews need to be made on the talk page where they are prominent and easy to find, both during and after the fact. -[[User:Peteforsyth|Pete]] ([[User talk:Peteforsyth|talk]]) 17:07, 1 April 2008 (UTC)
: I should add, that review was ''very'' thorough, and will serve as a great guide to improving the article even if the article doesn't pass. -[[User:Peteforsyth|Pete]] ([[User talk:Peteforsyth|talk]]) 17:09, 1 April 2008 (UTC)


at [[Wikipedia:Good articles/History]], there are a few sections that are worth splitting in my opinion:
::I agree with Pete. My own requests are the two above, [[Stuart McCall]] and [[History of Bradford City A.F.C.]] The reviews were very thorough and an enormous help in making great strides forward with the articles. I'm not sure if they'd be too long to add to the talk page. Just an after thought, would it not be possible to add a link to the old page on the Sandbox when passing or failing the GA? [[User:Peanut4|Peanut4]] ([[User talk:Peanut4|talk]]) 19:12, 1 April 2008 (UTC)
* Historical figures - politicians (357 articles)
* Historical figures - other (452 articles)
* North American history (217 articles)
* European history (326 articles)
* Monarchs (365 articles)
* Royalty and nobility (303 articles)
they're all getting difficult to read due to the giant walls of text. what are people's thoughts on how to split? <templatestyles src="Template:Color/styles.css" /><span class="tmp-color" style="color:#618A3D">... [[User:Sawyer777|<span style="color:#618A3D">sawyer</span>]] * <small>he/they</small> * [[User talk:Sawyer777|<span style="color:#618A3D">talk</span>]]</span> 19:37, 6 June 2024 (UTC)


:Could split United States history into a subsection, which would make a small difference although I suspect that subsection would remain in need of splitting sooner rather than later. There are a couple of options for European history, British Isles history seems an obvious one as being easy to define geographically and has quite a few items, splitting on continental Europe geographically is a bit more tricky with anachronisms (eg. what do you do with [[Hungarian conquest of the Carpathian Basin]]), although clearly defined regions like Italy might work. There's probably a couple of obvious subgroups for Monarchy, Royalty, and Nobility with 20+ units, perhaps staring with Roman/Byzantine. [[User:Chipmunkdavis|CMD]] ([[User talk:Chipmunkdavis|talk]]) 02:34, 7 June 2024 (UTC)
:::I am not disputing the thoroughness or helpfulness of the reviews, but they need to be on the article talk page, then if too large they can be archived as a talk page archive so they are easily accessible. They should be one click away, not a long hunt through the sandbox history - it took me a good 5 minutes to find the final version of the Stuart McCall review, which is useless for future reference. [[User:Ruhrfisch|Ruhrfisch]] '''[[User talk:Ruhrfisch|<sub><font color="green">&gt;&lt;&gt;</font></sub><small>&deg;</small><sup><small>&deg;</small></sup>]]''' 20:06, 1 April 2008 (UTC)
::yeah i think splitting geographically will make the most sense, even with edge cases. splitting off British & US-American items would be a great first step <templatestyles src="Template:Color/styles.css" /><span class="tmp-color" style="color:#618A3D">... [[User:Sawyer777|<span style="color:#618A3D">sawyer</span>]] * <small>he/they</small> * [[User talk:Sawyer777|<span style="color:#618A3D">talk</span>]]</span> 02:44, 7 June 2024 (UTC)
:Many of the figures in ''Historical figures - other'' are miscategorized. Many of them are nobility, and should be put in the ''Royalty and nobility'' section. Some are military figures, and should be put in the military people section. Religious figures should put under religion, artists under their respective sections, etc. There's even some animals, which should be filed under ''Animal domestic breeds, types, and individuals''.
:For politicians, monarchs, nobility, etc. it seems like they could be split by continent.
<small> [[User:Generalissima|Generalissima]] ([[User talk:Generalissima|talk]]) (it/she) </small> 14:15, 7 June 2024 (UTC)
::Added in animals to their proper section. <small> [[User:Generalissima|Generalissima]] ([[User talk:Generalissima|talk]]) (it/she) </small> 14:21, 7 June 2024 (UTC)
:::<small>If shifting Animals from [[Wikipedia:Good articles/History]] to [[Wikipedia:Good articles/Natural sciences]], please remember to change the topic on the article talk pages as well. [[User:Chipmunkdavis|CMD]] ([[User talk:Chipmunkdavis|talk]]) 14:27, 7 June 2024 (UTC)</small>
::::Ah. i am about to run and can't do that atm - id really appreciate it if anyone could <small> [[User:Generalissima|Generalissima]] ([[User talk:Generalissima|talk]]) (it/she) </small> 14:30, 7 June 2024 (UTC)
:::::Ah, didn't realise you'd already started. I'll handle the 12 moved, despite personal misgivings that the animals were likely mostly respectable historical figures. [[User:Chipmunkdavis|CMD]] ([[User talk:Chipmunkdavis|talk]]) 15:14, 7 June 2024 (UTC)
::::::i'll start moving some of the "other" figures into their proper sections, so that we can know what the actual makeup of the "other" section is. <templatestyles src="Template:Color/styles.css" /><span class="tmp-color" style="color:#618A3D">... [[User:Sawyer777|<span style="color:#618A3D">sawyer</span>]] * <small>he/they</small> * [[User talk:Sawyer777|<span style="color:#618A3D">talk</span>]]</span> 15:15, 7 June 2024 (UTC)
:::::::Done up to the Os of [https://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=Wikipedia:Good_articles/Natural_sciences&diff=prev&oldid=1227734497 these], was reverted on [[Nelson (cat)]] by [[User:Tim O'Doherty|Tim O'Doherty]]. There is also [[Judy (dog)]] in Warfare. [[User:Chipmunkdavis|CMD]] ([[User talk:Chipmunkdavis|talk]]) 15:21, 7 June 2024 (UTC)
::::::::Hi CMD, sorry about that. I'd say it's closer to history than natural sciences. Happy to discuss. Cheers - [[User:Tim O&#39;Doherty|Tim O&#39;Doherty]] ([[User talk:Tim O&#39;Doherty|talk]]) 15:24, 7 June 2024 (UTC)
:::::::::I'm not strongly opinionated, aside from feeling it would be best to have something clear and consistent for animal individuals. Might split them into their own lv5 for a start, there's about 25 and I'm not seeing the natural link with breeds/types. [[User:Chipmunkdavis|CMD]] ([[User talk:Chipmunkdavis|talk]]) 15:40, 7 June 2024 (UTC)
::::::::::I've split off the individuals (there were 30, although given the articles are just single names the line length is relatively short) and saved [[Olaf the Peacock]]. Would be good to hear more thoughts on where they should go. [[User:Chipmunkdavis|CMD]] ([[User talk:Chipmunkdavis|talk]]) 16:16, 10 June 2024 (UTC)
:::::::::::Shifted Judy as well and finished the matching. If there is a consensus to move them, should be easier to now move them all together. [[User:Chipmunkdavis|CMD]] ([[User talk:Chipmunkdavis|talk]]) 02:01, 14 June 2024 (UTC)
:i noticed that too. & i think by continent would work pretty well. <templatestyles src="Template:Color/styles.css" /><span class="tmp-color" style="color:#618A3D">... [[User:Sawyer777|<span style="color:#618A3D">sawyer</span>]] * <small>he/they</small> * [[User talk:Sawyer777|<span style="color:#618A3D">talk</span>]]</span> 14:22, 7 June 2024 (UTC)


== Does a previous failure to meet GA criteria stay on? ==
:Agreed. The reviews need to be properly placed on the article talk page per the GA review instructions. The length of them should not be a deterrent in any way, shape, or form. If the article's talk page is bloated, add an archiver, archive the older stuff, the post the review. [[User:Collectonian|Collectonian]] ([[User talk:Collectonian|talk]]) 20:10, 1 April 2008 (UTC)
I recently reviewed and promoted [[Tamil Nadu]] to Good Article status. It was unsuccessfully nominated a decade ago and the old notification of failure to meet GA is on the Talk page. Does that notification stay on the Talk page, even though it's now a GA? It seems to contradict the current status unless read carefully. [[User:Mr Serjeant Buzfuz|Mr Serjeant Buzfuz]] ([[User talk:Mr Serjeant Buzfuz|talk]]) 13:23, 12 June 2024 (UTC)


::I agree, GA reviews should not be placed in sandboxes, but this raises a more general issue (see below). ''[[User talk:Geometry guy|Geometry guy]]'' 20:15, 1 April 2008 (UTC)
:I tried to merge the new review into the {{tlx|Article history}} template. The important bit is to update the "current status". —[[User:Kusma|Kusma]] ([[User talk:Kusma|talk]]) 13:52, 12 June 2024 (UTC)
::Looks good. Thanks. [[User:Mr Serjeant Buzfuz|Mr Serjeant Buzfuz]] ([[User talk:Mr Serjeant Buzfuz|talk]]) 23:38, 12 June 2024 (UTC)


===Permanent GA reviews===
== GA quickfail discussion ==


I recently opened a discussion at [[WT:USRD#Failed GA]] regarding a GA review I quickfailed. It would be good if I could get some input regarding my action. [[User:Bneu2013|Bneu2013]] ([[User talk:Bneu2013|talk]]) 22:08, 12 June 2024 (UTC)
The importance of making GA reviews easily available to future reviewers and editors has been pointed out above. However, the current GA practice of storing reviews on article talk pages is not ideal in this respect, because talk pages get archived. In particular, for high traffic articles, the talk page is often archived automatically on a timescale of 1 month or less. This causes numerous problems finding old GA reviews, as links are often broken and the review isn't a click away, because there are multiple archive pages.


== [[Fusajiro Yamauchi]] ==
It might be better to store GA reviews in a permanent place (e.g., a talk subpage such as <nowiki>[[Talk:Stuart McCall/GA2]]</nowiki> for the second GA review of Stuart McCall) so that they can easily be found at any later date. While the review is active, it can, of course be transcluded onto the talk page, just as peer reviews are listed on the [[WP:PR|peer review page]]. After the review, a link can be left, but it will be a permanent link. This approach might appeal to [[User:Noble Story]] as well. What do others think? ''[[User talk:Geometry guy|Geometry guy]]'' 20:15, 1 April 2008 (UTC)


I'm not too sure if this article meets the criteria for what makes a good article. At a glimpse:
:I could support an idea like that, particularly since it would be closer to what is done with peer reviews and FAs. I've always wondered why GA goes on the talk page instead of using similar processes to those two. [[User:Collectonian|Collectonian]] ([[User talk:Collectonian|talk]]) 20:20, 1 April 2008 (UTC)
* Amateurish prose: {{!xt|Indeed, due to the fact these places...}}
** {{!xt|Thus in the goal to inherit the company, Fusajiro was adopted...}}
** {{!xt|Fusajiro then has the idea of using the Hanafuda cards of lesser quality...}}
** Many other examples of this.
* Awkward wikilinking: {{!xt|Just as Hanafuda cards were allowed again in 1885 so too did occidental playing cards (Standard 52-card deck) become allowed...}}
* Grammar errors: {{!xt|...these western cards so called "Trump" by the japanese population...}}
* Randomly inserted sentences: {{!xt|(The sen is a subdivision of the Japanese yen which became obsolete in 1954.)}}
* Questionably sourced media (one is straight up ripped from [https://www.eurogamer.net/articles/2018-01-23-heres-an-incredible-look-at-nintendos-original-hq-back-in-1889 Eurogamer])


The [[Talk:Fusajiro Yamauchi/GA1|GAN review]] seems to be lacking as well, with a very light prose check, no discernible source spot check, and no copyright check, which I'm 99.8% sure is just an incorrectly-done review. Should I proceed with a reassessment request, or can this GAN be rescinded altogether? [[User:Joeyquism|<span style="letter-spacing: 0.2px; color:black; font-family: 'Inter';">joeyquism</span>]] ([[User talk:Joeyquism|<span style="letter-spacing: 0.2px; color:black; font-style: italic; font-family: 'Inter';">talk page</span>]]) 01:12, 13 June 2024 (UTC)
::Sounds a very good idea. I found Noble Story's review extremely useful but also found it easier to be on his Sandbox rather than the McCall talk page. The same for the History article. [[User:Peanut4|Peanut4]] ([[User talk:Peanut4|talk]]) 20:21, 1 April 2008 (UTC)


:That was a very recent GAN, closed 9 June 2024‎, it can be reopened if needed. First step is to raise it with the reviewer. [[User:Chipmunkdavis|CMD]] ([[User talk:Chipmunkdavis|talk]]) 01:18, 13 June 2024 (UTC)
:::I <s>like this idea a lot</s> love this idea - it would also save playing edit history archeologist in the talk page archives ;-) [[User:Ruhrfisch|Ruhrfisch]] '''[[User talk:Ruhrfisch|<sub><font color="green">&gt;&lt;&gt;</font></sub><small>&deg;</small><sup><small>&deg;</small></sup>]]''' 20:28, 1 April 2008 (UTC)
::I believe the lack of source and copyright checking and the amateurish prose are both grounds enough to go ahead and reopen the review. Of course I assume [[WP:GOODFAITH]] from both parties, but it seems that this is a case of [[WP:CIR]]. I've informed both the reviewer and nominator that the review has been reopened. [[User:Joeyquism|<span style="letter-spacing: 0.2px; color:black; font-family: 'Inter';">joeyquism</span>]] ([[User talk:Joeyquism|<span style="letter-spacing: 0.2px; color:black; font-style: italic; font-family: 'Inter';">talk page</span>]]) 02:56, 13 June 2024 (UTC)
:::I think "amateurish" and "CIR" are a little harsh. It just looks like people who are working to learn best practices and could use some helpful advice—something that tends to be rarely given for up-and-coming editors. [[User:Thebiguglyalien|<span style="color:#324717">The</span><span style="color:#45631f">big</span><span style="color:#547826">ugly</span><span style="color:#68942f">alien</span>]] ([[User talk:Thebiguglyalien|<span style="color:sienna">talk</span>]]) 02:59, 13 June 2024 (UTC)
:I've always supported the idea of having GA reviews on the talk page because I believe that it encourages the participation of those editors who may not be inclined to look at the "please leave comments" link at the top of the talk page. On the other hand, I agree that having to excavate for old GA reviews is a pita. So if transclusion can serve both aims, then fine, let's do it. --[[User:Malleus Fatuarum|Malleus Fatuorum]] ([[User talk:Malleus Fatuarum|talk]]) 20:50, 1 April 2008 (UTC)
::::Fair enough - I didn't mean any offense by my use of these terms, just for the record. I've also extended a hand to both editors in case they are in need of any help during the GAN process. [[User:Joeyquism|<span style="letter-spacing: 0.2px; color:black; font-family: 'Inter';">joeyquism</span>]] ([[User talk:Joeyquism|<span style="letter-spacing: 0.2px; color:black; font-style: italic; font-family: 'Inter';">talk page</span>]]) 03:07, 13 June 2024 (UTC)
:::Thank you for those very polite and well-worded talkpage messages. [[User:Chipmunkdavis|CMD]] ([[User talk:Chipmunkdavis|talk]]) 03:01, 13 June 2024 (UTC)
::::Forgot to reply to this - no problem. [[User:Joeyquism|<span style="letter-spacing: 0.2px; color:black; font-family: 'Inter', sans-serif;">joeyquism</span>]] ([[User talk:Joeyquism|<span style="letter-spacing: 0.2px; color:black; font-family: 'Inter', sans-serif;">talk</span>]]) 03:20, 16 June 2024 (UTC)


== Do aviators fall under the subject section Transport? ==
::Interestingly enough a review I am undertaking at the moment led to a small discussion on the editors talk page. This I copied this back into the article's talk page [[Talk:History of timekeeping devices]] so that the process of the GA was understandable to others. I do like the idea of a GA subpage as long as it is transcluded onto the talk page, a <nowiki>{{box}}</nowiki> with clear instructions as to what is going on and a <nowiki>{{box}}</nowiki> at the end saying where the archived GA process is. Brilliant idea. [[User:Edmund Patrick|Edmund Patrick]] <small>( [[User talk:Edmund Patrick|<sup>'''confer'''</sup>]] [[Special:Contributions/Edmund Patrick|<sub>'''work'''</sub>]])</small> 21:06, 1 April 2008 (UTC)


Asking because unlike some of the other subject areas, Transport does not mention related people/professions as included, and none of the nominations currently there are for biographies. [[User:AddWittyNameHere|<span style="background:#42024b; color:#fcf09c;">'''''AddWitty'''''</span>]][[User talk:AddWittyNameHere|<span style="background:#fcf09c; color:#42024b;">''NameHere''</span>]] 13:14, 13 June 2024 (UTC)
:::I saw [http://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=Talk:Interstate_37&curid=2587516&diff=202634290&oldid=202546220 this edit] fly by not a half hour ago and couldn't help but think that it could serve as a sufficient example. &mdash;[[User:Lpangelrob|<span style="font-variant: small-caps">Rob</span>]] <span style="font-size:x-small">(</span>[[User_talk:Lpangelrob|<span style='color:#006600; font-size:x-small;'>talk</span>]]<span style="font-size:x-small">)</span> 21:10, 1 April 2008 (UTC)
::::I actually feel that review offers the ''best'' option: archive the GAN for ArticleHistory et al '''''after''''' the GA has passed/failed. That solves worry about people seeing the review and contributing. <font color="#cc6600">[[User:David Fuchs|Der Wohltemperierte Fuchs]]</font><sup> <nowiki>(</nowiki><small><font color="#993300">[[User talk:David Fuchs|talk]]</font></small><nowiki>)</nowiki></sup> 23:04, 1 April 2008 (UTC)
:::::Exactly! --[[User:Malleus Fatuarum|Malleus Fatuorum]] ([[User talk:Malleus Fatuarum|talk]]) 23:16, 1 April 2008 (UTC)


:For what it's worth, when I reviewed [[Jean Batten]], the article was placed under world history, historical figures: other. However, there is a section within transport entitled air transport people which might also be an option (and in fact I'm wondering if I put Batten in the wrong place). [[User:Trainsandotherthings|Trainsandotherthings]] ([[User talk:Trainsandotherthings|talk]]) 23:31, 13 June 2024 (UTC)
Well, since I seem to be the center of this debate, I might as well explain myself. I originally used my sandbox for testing and/or previewing major edits. However, it eventually morphed into a place for my review of GANs. I wanted to use them that way because my reviews are often very long (like [http://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=User:Noble_Story/sandbox&oldid=199730914#Third_Review this one]). As as I side note, I do keep a [http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/User:Noble_Story/Good_Article_Reviews list] of my reviews, and there I have a link to all my reviews. However, I see that it is best to put it the review the talk page. So, my apologies for those who were put out by my methods.
::Good to know I'm not the only person uncertain of where to place a nomination, then! Mine might be a little more "squarely" placed in transport than Jean Batten because it's about an aviation pioneer that was also an airline transport pilot, so guess I'll go for transport, I suppose, but yeah, world history - historical figures was my other guess. (It could even technically fit under military because he was a military pilot for a brief portion of his career, too--but that's not what his notability comes from, so not a great fit altogether) [[User:AddWittyNameHere|<span style="background:#42024b; color:#fcf09c;">'''''AddWitty'''''</span>]][[User talk:AddWittyNameHere|<span style="background:#fcf09c; color:#42024b;">''NameHere''</span>]] 23:39, 13 June 2024 (UTC)
:::@[[User:Trainsandotherthings|Trainsandotherthings]] Yeah I agree that Jean Batten fits better under "air transport people" than "world history, historical figures: other". That historical figure section is massive (400+ articles) while air transport people only has 9. Jean Batten's article and achievement is also similar to [[Juan Bielovucic]], who is already listed within the air transport people category. [[User:OhanaUnited|<b style="color: #0000FF;">OhanaUnited</b>]][[User talk:OhanaUnited|<b style="color: green;"><sup>Talk page</sup></b>]] 13:57, 14 June 2024 (UTC)
::::I've moved Batten to air transport people. Hopefully I did it correctly. [[User:Trainsandotherthings|Trainsandotherthings]] ([[User talk:Trainsandotherthings|talk]]) 14:26, 14 June 2024 (UTC)


== GAN sorting uses different categories than Good Article nominations? ==
By the way, are you saying I should create a page like [http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Talk:ArticleName/GAR this], to keep reviews for future articles I review? [[User:Noble Story|Noble Story]] ([[User talk:Noble Story|talk]]) 02:38, 2 April 2008 (UTC)
Is there a reason why [[User:SDZeroBot/GAN sorting]] uses a different category system than [[Wikipedia:Good article nominations]]? I was looking for a few articles in "GAN sorting" to see how long they had been waiting for reviews, but the categories don't match up at all; the only way to find an article was to do word searches by the article name. For example, [[Charlemagne]] is listed under the "History" category in "Good Article nominations", but under "Culture/Biography" in "GAN sorting"; [[Fair Work Ombudsman v Quest South Perth]] is listed under "Social sciences and society/Law" in "Good Article nominations", but under "Geography/Regions/Oceania" in "GAN sorting". It would be helpful if both lists used the same categories. [[User:Mr Serjeant Buzfuz|Mr Serjeant Buzfuz]] ([[User talk:Mr Serjeant Buzfuz|talk]]) 13:44, 13 June 2024 (UTC)
:The bot's sorting is done automatically using a machine learning tool, and includes articles under every topic it thinks is relevant (so you will see that Charlemagne, for example, is listed as "Geography/Regions/Europe/Western Europe" and "History and Society/History" among other topics). I imagine they differ because the ORES classification was developed after the already-existing GA system, and they weren't concerned with making them compatible - the ORES system the bot uses is used to categorise e.g. AfDs as well as GAs, which had developed its own categorisation.
:I suppose we could change the way the [[WP:GAN]] page works to sort articles using the bot rather than the current system, but that seems like a bunch of work for no clear benefit. [[User:Caeciliusinhorto-public|Caeciliusinhorto-public]] ([[User talk:Caeciliusinhorto-public|talk]]) 13:55, 13 June 2024 (UTC)
::The benefit is that it makes it easier to use both pages. There is no way to use the Sorting page to sort by the categories on the GA nominations page. Suppose I want to see the oldest article in the History category on the GA Nominations page, to review it because someone’s been waiting a long time for it. There’s no way to do that, because the History articles are scattered about by an entirely different category system, putting Charlemagne in “Culture/Biography”. There’s no way to see the oldest “Law” articles waiting for a review: the decision of the High Court of Australia (Fair work) is sorted under “Geography”. I don’t see any benefit from having a sorting system that isn’t based on the categories used on the Good Articles nomination page. [[User:Mr Serjeant Buzfuz|Mr Serjeant Buzfuz]] ([[User talk:Mr Serjeant Buzfuz|talk]]) 14:09, 13 June 2024 (UTC)
::There’s also the point that relying on a bot/AI to determine the categories is less useful than relying on the judgment of the nominator who decides which category to put an article in when they nominate it. The decision of the Australian High Court in the Fair Work article is notable as an article about an important legal issue from the highest court in Australia. But the bot ignored that, and decided it was most notable because of its geographic location. Judgment by a human is more accurate here than a bot. [[User:Mr Serjeant Buzfuz|Mr Serjeant Buzfuz]] ([[User talk:Mr Serjeant Buzfuz|talk]]) 14:15, 13 June 2024 (UTC)
:::If you don't want to rely on the AI classification (I never do!) then you shouldn't use the bot which uses AI classification. You can use [[User:ChristieBot/SortableGANoms]] if you want a sortable list which uses the manual categories. (But in the specific case you are talking about the bot {{em|did}} classify [[Fair Work Ombudsman v Quest South Perth]] under History and Society/Politics and government; the ability to classify a nomination into multiple relevant categories seems like a useful feature actually!) [[User:Caeciliusinhorto-public|Caeciliusinhorto-public]] ([[User talk:Caeciliusinhorto-public|talk]]) 14:41, 13 June 2024 (UTC)


== GA summary on list pages ==
: Hey Noble -- no need to be sorry! I think that [[WP:BOLD]] requires us to do stuff in the best way we can think of. When we need to discuss it and modify it, we do. But I for one don't think you did anything "wrong," even though I think there are better ways to do it.


Raising [https://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=Wikipedia:Good_articles/Warfare&diff=prev&oldid=1229148013 this change] for discussion here. Removing the repeated summary seems reasonable, but making the navigation more inaccessible is going to add further friction to the manual cleanups needed by making it harder to switch between lists. Wondering if there is a way to keep some sort of more compact navigation bar at the top. [[User:Chipmunkdavis|CMD]] ([[User talk:Chipmunkdavis|talk]]) 14:13, 15 June 2024 (UTC)
: My reading of the above is this:
:* Include reviews on talk pages, has strong consensus and should be done.
:* Proposal for a standard/permanent link like [[Talk:Blabla/GAR]] sounds good, but is still under discussion.


:It should be consistent between the different GA pages. There's no point if each one has a different style for navigation '''[[User:Lee Vilenski|<span style="color:green">Lee Vilenski</span>]] <sup>([[User talk:Lee Vilenski|talk]] • [[Special:Contribs/Lee Vilenski|contribs]])</sup>''' 15:08, 15 June 2024 (UTC)
: -[[User:Peteforsyth|Pete]] ([[User talk:Peteforsyth|talk]]) 02:48, 2 April 2008 (UTC)
::All pages used [[Wikipedia:Good articles/Summary]], what this change did was hide it. [[User:Chipmunkdavis|CMD]] ([[User talk:Chipmunkdavis|talk]]) 16:21, 15 June 2024 (UTC)
:Pinging @[[User:Prhartcom|Prhartcom]] as the person who hid the summary (twice). {{pb}}My take is that this should be consistent across all of the different GA topic subpages, though I see this has been done on all of these pages. A compact navigation bar would be great as well, if that's possible. &ndash; [[User:Epicgenius|Epicgenius]] ([[User talk:Epicgenius|talk]]) 15:37, 17 June 2024 (UTC)
::Thanks for the ping and the feedback. Glad everyone likes it. Oh all right, I suppose now we do need a compact navigation bar to each of the 15 topic pages; I will start work on that. It will be very clear yet simple, similar to the page contents seen at the top of the [[Wikipedia:Good articles/all]] page (that combines all the topic pages). Cheers, [[User:Prhartcom|Prhartcom]] ([[User talk:Prhartcom|talk]]) 03:06, 19 June 2024 (UTC)
:::All right, I did it; its on the [[Wikipedia:Good articles/Warfare]] page only right now. Next I'll make it a template and put it on all the topic pages. Hope it's okay? [[User:Prhartcom|Prhartcom]] ([[User talk:Prhartcom|talk]]) 03:26, 19 June 2024 (UTC)
::::A definite help. Is there a reason not to have it in columns given the apparent desire to save vertical space? [[User:Chipmunkdavis|CMD]] ([[User talk:Chipmunkdavis|talk]]) 04:46, 19 June 2024 (UTC)


== Song articles without sigcov of the song ==
Thinking it over, I was wondering if [[Talk:Portland Trail Blazers#Final GA Review|this]] could be viable. After reviewing the article (in this case failing it), I include a note at the end of the page to showing linking to the archived version of my review on my sandbox. That way the review will always be there, and the link will be on the talk page, easily accessible for anyone who wants to look over the review. [[User:Noble Story|Noble Story]] ([[User talk:Noble Story|talk]]) 02:54, 2 April 2008 (UTC)


Oftentimes when looking at song GANs, there are several nominations where all of the sourcing is about the album and none of the sources are specifically about the song. This raises some notability issues and goes against [[WP:NSONG]], but how should we handle this at GAN? There's of course the perennial dispute about whether non-notable articles should be passed through GA. But besides that, can these song articles pass criteria 2 and 3 if all of the sources are about the album? These are common enough that I feel some sort of consensus or precedent should be established. [[User:Thebiguglyalien|<span style="color:#324717">The</span><span style="color:#45631f">big</span><span style="color:#547826">ugly</span><span style="color:#68942f">alien</span>]] ([[User talk:Thebiguglyalien|<span style="color:sienna">talk</span>]]) 05:17, 16 June 2024 (UTC)
I don't think creating a third talk space for GA is viable. Either use the regular talk page or have a completely separate space like FA. Creating a special GA review space is adding more bureaucracy to the system, not simplifying it. Also, using the talk page is extremely convenient for both reviewers and nominators. Hardly anyone goes way back in the history digging for GA reviews years or months old anyway. The problem with the reviews that started this discussion was that the review existed permanently nowhere except in the history of a user sandbox. So long as talk pages and archives stay permanent, and they always do, it's not a problem. Creating a new GA review space is using a cannon to kill a gnat. [[User:VanTucky|'''Van''']][[User talk:VanTucky|<span style="color:#FF4F00">'''Tucky'''</span>]] 03:02, 2 April 2008 (UTC)
:I guess I get your reasoning. However, I would think that an old version of an article would exist just as much as an article in an archive. They are both there, after all, and they won't be deleted. I don't know if my reasoning is correct, but that's what I'm thinking. [[User:Noble Story|Noble Story]] ([[User talk:Noble Story|talk]]) 03:19, 2 April 2008 (UTC)
:: The proposal is that ''each'' GA review would have its own page, ''exactly'' like FAC and peer review. It doesn't matter where this page is (it could be a Talk subpage or a Wikipedia subpage), as long as it is permanent and easy to find. ''[[User talk:Geometry guy|Geometry guy]]'' 07:14, 2 April 2008 (UTC)
:::Don't have a problem with this, as long as while each review is 'live' it can be found ''in full'' on the article talk page and edited from there. Conducting the review on the talk page, as we do at present, seems simpler to me than creating and transcluding a separate page, but I've no real preference. Certainly archiving the review somewhere permanent would have the advantage that the AH template can then be linked properly too. [[User:EyeSerene|<span style="font-family:Verdana;color:#4B0082">EyeSerene</span>]]<sup>[[User talk:EyeSerene|<span style="color:#6B8E23">talk</span>]]</sup> 07:32, 2 April 2008 (UTC)
::::I agree with VanTucky, plus new reviewers might not understand or skip this new step and we would end up having reviews everywhere. It's really not that hard to find archived reviews besides most articles don't even have archives. I don't know, changing the whole process to spare a few clicks seems pretty silly.--[[User:Yamanbaiia|Yamanbaiia]]<font color="#203"></font><sup>([[User talk:Yamanbaiia|free hugs!]])</sup> 09:20, 2 April 2008 (UTC)
:::::I certainly see the drawbacks as well as the benefits. However, the former can be minimized: the dedicated page for an article's GA review would be set-up by the nominator, in exactly the same way as it is set-up for peer reviews. So, no extra work for reviewers. As EyeSerene suggests, this dedicated page would be transcluded live and in full onto the talk page, so it could be edited easily as now using the edit link for the section on the talk page.
:::::It isn't just about a few clicks, it is about accountability: it is not unheard of for articles to be made GAs without a proper review; we get one every couple of months at [[WP:GAR]] and it takes some work to spot them, so I am sure we miss many more. A permanent link to each GA review would help to eliminate this problem. ''[[User talk:Geometry guy|Geometry guy]]'' 09:46, 2 April 2008 (UTC)
::::::Accountability? What about talk pages are not accountable? We're not having a large problem with the accountability of GA reviews, in terms of making them permanent and visible. Again, cannon to kill a gnat. I don't want to have to create an entirely new page just to write a review, especially for quick fails. It ''is'' extra work for reviewers, and I strongly dislike it. Talk pages serve this function well. Besides, isn't our goal trying to reduce instruction creep, not expand it? Having to create a new discussion and review space just for GA certainly doesn't simplify the process. [[User:VanTucky|'''Van''']][[User talk:VanTucky|<span style="color:#FF4F00">'''Tucky'''</span>]] 19:38, 2 April 2008 (UTC)
:::::::Read the thread. You would not have to create the review page. ''[[User talk:Geometry guy|Geometry guy]]'' 09:37, 3 April 2008 (UTC)


:Well, either the article is notable, and can be a GA, or it's non-notable and should be deleted. AfD is the likely place to work that out. '''[[User:Lee Vilenski|<span style="color:green">Lee Vilenski</span>]] <sup>([[User talk:Lee Vilenski|talk]] • [[Special:Contribs/Lee Vilenski|contribs]])</sup>''' 09:49, 16 June 2024 (UTC)
I'm not big on this idea, but seemingly quite a few others are. How about making a subpage of GAN, just like FAC/PR do it? eg. [[Wikipedia:Good article nominations/Wrought iron]]? (to take the article at the top of the backlog list now) Nominator creates it, and instead of using {{tl|la}} as we currently do on the main GAN page, we develop a special template for this page which links to the review subpage and has parameters for "on review" and "on hold" (replacing the current templates for that). I guess I just don't like talk page subpages because that's where archives go, and this could make it confusing for the prefixindex. Comments? ''[[User:Dihydrogen Monoxide|dihydrogen monoxide]]'' <small>([[User talk:Dihydrogen Monoxide|H<sub>2</sub>O]])</small> 10:01, 3 April 2008 (UTC)


== Nominator temp-blocked as a sock-puppeteer ==
: It is largely a matter of psychology where the review page goes: a subpage of GAN works just as well as a subpage of article talk. However if would have to be something like [[Wikipedia:Good article nominations/Wrought iron/1]] to accommodate multiple reviews. Although I see the issues with bureaucracy, I am also interested in this idea because it might help with the automation of [[WP:GAN]], which has been much discussed (not just by me:), but not yet taken forwards. ''[[User talk:Geometry guy|Geometry guy]]'' 10:18, 3 April 2008 (UTC)
::Yes, I think that's the main attraction. We're taking small steps in this direction anyway (with alterations to the GA review template), so why not move things forward further? As far as setting up the pages, although it's inevitably slightly more complex for the nominator, a script might be helpful for regulars (similar to the Xfd script). [[User:EyeSerene|<span style="font-family:Verdana;color:#4B0082">EyeSerene</span>]]<sup>[[User talk:EyeSerene|<span style="color:#6B8E23">talk</span>]]</sup> 11:13, 3 April 2008 (UTC)
:::A subpage is a good idea. Well, maybe. For archiving, yes. But for accountability? It really doesn't do a lot. Actually, that's the problem with GA reviewing. There is no accountability. Isn't there some way to make the GAN process like the FAC process? [[User:Noble Story|Noble Story]] ([[User talk:Noble Story|talk]]) 13:38, 3 April 2008 (UTC)
::::It will help accountability in that the absence of such a page will be a good indicator the review was not conducted properly. We've deliberately avoided mimicing FA too much though. GA is not really supposed to be some sort of FA-lite ;) [[User:EyeSerene|<span style="font-family:Verdana;color:#4B0082">EyeSerene</span>]]<sup>[[User talk:EyeSerene|<span style="color:#6B8E23">talk</span>]]</sup> 14:47, 3 April 2008 (UTC)


Hey all. A GA nominator whose article I was reviewing has just been temporarily banned for one month for sock-puppeteering. I haven't had to deal with a case of a nominator being blocked mid-review so I don't know what to do. Should I leave the review on hold, pending their return? Or should I just close the review as failed? (I still don't think it meets GA criteria as of now). --[[User:Grnrchst|Grnrchst]] ([[User talk:Grnrchst|talk]]) 10:52, 16 June 2024 (UTC)
== Checking links ==
:I would suggest failing it; they can always renominate if they still want to after they return from the block. [[User:Mike Christie|Mike Christie]] ([[User_talk:Mike Christie|talk]] - [[Special:Contributions/Mike_Christie|contribs]] - [[User:Mike Christie/Reference library|library]]) 11:25, 16 June 2024 (UTC)
::Gone ahead and failed it. Thanks for the advice. --[[User:Grnrchst|Grnrchst]] ([[User talk:Grnrchst|talk]]) 12:09, 16 June 2024 (UTC)


== I've changed my mind about hard caps on open nominations ==
I have just been checking the links on an article I have submitted for GA. Some of the links are coming up with the message "Cookie test detected. Killing loop". Does anyone know what this means? The links work fine, as does another that is marked unavailable. --'''[[User:seahamlass|<font color="purple">seahamlass</font>]]''' 10:10, 2 April 2008 (UTC)
:Hmmm, sounds like a problem with your browser to me. I dunno. [[User:VanTucky|'''Van''']][[User talk:VanTucky|<span style="color:#FF4F00">'''Tucky'''</span>]] 19:39, 2 April 2008 (UTC)
::I think this is a site that requires the reader to have a cookie from the site in order to browse their content. [[User:TimVickers|Tim Vickers]] ([[User talk:TimVickers|talk]]) 19:43, 2 April 2008 (UTC)
::Yeah, going on what Tim said, I think it doesn't work with the link checker, so just ignore it. ''[[User:Dihydrogen Monoxide|dihydrogen monoxide]]'' <small>([[User talk:Dihydrogen Monoxide|H<sub>2</sub>O]])</small> 03:48, 3 April 2008 (UTC)


In the past, I've objected to hard caps on how many nominations someone can have open at once. My reasoning was that it's unfair punishment to our most active content creators and that it only masks the problem. After running the numbers, I believe these arguments are outweighed by other factors.
Many thanks for all the advice! --'''[[User:seahamlass|<font color="purple">seahamlass</font>]]''' 06:22, 3 April 2008 (UTC)


As of the most recent [[WP:GANR|GAN report]], there are 677 nominations under review or awaiting a reviewer. There are 58 nominators with at least three nominations, making up 340 noms in total. We make up almost exactly half of the backlog. If we emptied the "Nominators with multiple nominations" section by reducing everyone down to two noms, the backlog would instantly decrease by 224 nominations, bringing us down to 453. That's one third of the total backlog just made of those extra nominations. If we limit it to a more generous five noms, that's still 95 extra nominations beyond that limit.
== [[Wikipedia:Good_article_nominations#Video_and_computer_games|Video and computer games]] section ==


To the argument that limiting noms only hides the full backlog, it's about how the noms are weighted. Right now, these "power users" make up half the backlog despite being a minority of the total nominators. This is unfair to the people who wait months longer in line just so we can double, triple, quadruple dip. To the argument that it makes it harder for efficient nominators to nominate, there's a way to make your nom a higher priority: ''review''! Review the noms above yours in that category, or just review in general to lower the backlog. Even if new noms instantly take their place, those will have a more recent nom date. This way, there won't be one person who still has eight other nominations ahead of you after you review one of theirs. Or you could review for people who only have one nom and won't immediately replace it, which is often a new nominator who should get priority anyway. Alternatively, there's [[Wikipedia:Good article review circles]] where you can get a reviewer much more quickly.
Any objections to renaming this section to "Video games", as per the [[WP:VG|WikiProject]] (which was once called "Computer and Video games" (IIRC) and renamed)? ''[[User:Dihydrogen Monoxide|dihydrogen monoxide]]'' <small>([[User talk:Dihydrogen Monoxide|H<sub>2</sub>O]])</small> 10:40, 4 April 2008 (UTC)
:None here, seems logical. [[User:EyeSerene|<span style="font-family:Verdana;color:#4B0082">EyeSerene</span>]]<sup>[[User talk:EyeSerene|<span style="color:#6B8E23">talk</span>]]</sup> 10:56, 4 April 2008 (UTC)
::I've gone ahead and done it. Feel free to object, anyone ([http://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=Wikipedia:Good_article_nominations&diff=203261626&oldid=203259121 diff]). ''[[User:Dihydrogen Monoxide|dihydrogen monoxide]]'' <small>([[User talk:Dihydrogen Monoxide|H<sub>2</sub>O]])</small> 10:58, 4 April 2008 (UTC)


Once my current nominations are done, I'm going to voluntarily limit myself to no more than five at a time. But these limits only have significant effect if we adhere to them collectively, and I'm switching to a support !vote on such a measure. I'm also going to ping the few people who have more open noms than I do in case they'd be interested in a similar voluntary limitation: {{u|Magentic Manifestations}}, {{u|Chiswick Chap}}, {{u|Aszx5000}}, {{u|Gonzo fan2007}}, {{u|Ippantekina}}, {{u|Aintabli}}, {{u|Epicgenius}}. [[User:Thebiguglyalien|<span style="color:#324717">The</span><span style="color:#45631f">big</span><span style="color:#547826">ugly</span><span style="color:#68942f">alien</span>]] ([[User talk:Thebiguglyalien|<span style="color:sienna">talk</span>]]) 02:22, 17 June 2024 (UTC)
== [[User:Dihydrogen Monoxide/GAN passed spam]] ==


:Frankly, I think this is not a very good idea. The "power users" are often our most experienced and dedicated contributors - so notably, they tend to have articles that are high quality to begin with and thus easier to review. Reviewing a newer editor's GAN is often far more difficult, because they aren't used to all the inns and outs yet - this takes an entirely separate skillset from reviewing an Epicgenius or Chiswick GAN (namely, that only an experienced reviewer would be as good at it!) I really don't looking at reducing the backlog as a numbers game is beneficial; what's important is getting articles reviewed in timely manner, which I don't think the "power users"' GAs are contributing to. <small> [[User:Generalissima|Generalissima]] ([[User talk:Generalissima|talk]]) (it/she) </small> 02:46, 17 June 2024 (UTC)
(Shortcut: [[User:DHMO/GAP]] - remember to subst! - <nowiki>{{subst:User:DHMO/GAP}}</nowiki>)
::Oh dear, this old chestnut again. I'll just say that it's bound to have something like the [[Poisson distribution]], that's just how nature is. [[User:Chiswick Chap|Chiswick Chap]] ([[User talk:Chiswick Chap|talk]]) 03:39, 17 June 2024 (UTC)
::Yes, generally an experienced editor's work is easier to review, given that the length and complexity of the article are the same. But by sheer volume, one experienced editor with lots of noms, myself included, is going to squeeze out those newer nominators who need the most attention. And like I said above, reviewing those nominations would be incentivized relative to an experienced nominator, as newer nominators wouldn't immediately have another nom ready to go. It's not a numbers game, it's about weight, and it would be fewer articles at a time being reviewed more quickly than a whole block of them being reviewed slowly.
::And to approach from the other angle, I believe we should more readily (quick)fail nominations that aren't ready for GAN. It shouldn't just be "is it far from the criteria" but whether it fails the criteria in a way that puts an undue burden on a reviewer. These are ones that probably shouldn't have been nominated anyway, but they take up a disproportionate amount of reviewer time. When nominations aren't ready, we can direct editors to peer review, GOCE, the Teahouse, help pages, or wherever depending on where its weaknesses are. I'd say a limit on max noms plus holding nominators accountable for making sure nominations are ready is the best combo. We could get nominations in and out much more quickly that way while using GAN as a lightweight quality assurance/verification process instead of as Peer Review 2. [[User:Thebiguglyalien|<span style="color:#324717">The</span><span style="color:#45631f">big</span><span style="color:#547826">ugly</span><span style="color:#68942f">alien</span>]] ([[User talk:Thebiguglyalien|<span style="color:sienna">talk</span>]]) 03:44, 17 June 2024 (UTC)
:::Unfortunately, the trend has been to increase GA standards rather than to accept that GAs aren't expected to be perfect (and that no article is, honestly). I doubt we'll secure any kind of consensus for returning GA to the lightweight process it was written as. &spades;[[User:Premeditated Chaos|PMC]]&spades; [[User_talk:Premeditated Chaos|(talk)]] 04:29, 17 June 2024 (UTC)
::::Given how little oversight there is, there's really nothing stopping individual reviewers from deciding how strict or lenient they want to be with the criteria, with failing, or with how they think the process should work. [[User:Thebiguglyalien|<span style="color:#324717">The</span><span style="color:#45631f">big</span><span style="color:#547826">ugly</span><span style="color:#68942f">alien</span>]] ([[User talk:Thebiguglyalien|<span style="color:sienna">talk</span>]]) 04:37, 17 June 2024 (UTC)
:::::Generally I'd agree, except that people who are "caught" doing reviews that others find inadequate are regularly dragged here and castigated. And when mistakes are caught in a GA that passed, reviewers catch flak for it.
:::::On the other hand, people don't like being the "bad guy" and failing articles that aren't ready, so we give infinite time and chances for articles that frankly aren't up to snuff. Some noms will get upset that you failed their article, and nobody likes being on the other end of that conflict.
:::::Basically, there's a competing social pressure to be incredibly thorough yet infinitely forgiving. Reviewers can't win, they get discouraged, and difficult articles sit around for ages. We need to change the culture around GA reviewing if we ever want to make a meaningful change in the backlog. &spades;[[User:Premeditated Chaos|PMC]]&spades; [[User_talk:Premeditated Chaos|(talk)]] 04:54, 17 June 2024 (UTC)
::::::Honestly, I'd be willing to strike out everything I said above and go in the opposite direction. We could just as easily say it's a free for all on nominating but then be more firm with reviewing and quickfailing so weak noms don't bog us down. I'm actually more inclined toward that than a hard cap, except right now there's no consistency in reviews, and of course many nominators feel entitled to a pass. I personally am willing to be the one to say "this isn't ready for nomination" (and I have been trying to look for those nominations lately), but like you said, it needs to be part of a broader cultural change.
::::::I'm going off on a slight tangent now, but I believe there are more sub-standard reviews that slip through the cracks than ones that get "caught". I watch many of them go by feeling like my hands are tied because there's also a stigma against accusing people of doing bad reviews, and it's gotten to the point where I just ignore them unless they start reviewing one of mine, in which case I ask them to return it. [[User:Thebiguglyalien|<span style="color:#324717">The</span><span style="color:#45631f">big</span><span style="color:#547826">ugly</span><span style="color:#68942f">alien</span>]] ([[User talk:Thebiguglyalien|<span style="color:sienna">talk</span>]]) 12:34, 17 June 2024 (UTC)
:::::::I prefer to review the new nominators, starting with the ones who have done reviews, which usually means a higher failure rate and slower reviews for the passes because they are learning. I do this because I believe in encouraging a good review/nomination ratio, but another benefit is that it is an opportunity to teach those nominators how a good review should look. [[User:Mike Christie|Mike Christie]] ([[User_talk:Mike Christie|talk]] - [[Special:Contributions/Mike_Christie|contribs]] - [[User:Mike Christie/Reference library|library]]) 13:12, 17 June 2024 (UTC)
:::::::I strongly disagree there is a stigma against accusing people of doing bad reviews. People do it on this talk page regularly, and the prospect of being publicly shamed creates a chilling effect for new reviewers.
:::::::I do want to point out the contradiction between suggesting that we use "GAN as a lightweight quality assurance/verification process" and saying reviewers should basically review how they want, but then bringing up "sub-standard reviews". We can't have speed and perfection. Either we accept that the process is supposed to be lightweight and allow reviews to be lightweight, or we keep tightening the screws and watch the backlog climb. &spades;[[User:Premeditated Chaos|PMC]]&spades; [[User_talk:Premeditated Chaos|(talk)]] 14:12, 17 June 2024 (UTC)
::::::::I'm probably part of the problem -- I can't really do "lightweight" reviews. I personally want peer reviews and suggestions to improve my articles much more than I care about another green plus, and so my reviews tend to be in depth and address more than the GA criteria. And nobody calls me out on this, even for monstrosities like [[Talk:Chinese characters/GA1]]. I am not sure whether dedicated coordinators who look at every review for some quality assurance would help or harm, but this might be worth brainstorming about. —[[User:Kusma|Kusma]] ([[User talk:Kusma|talk]]) 09:49, 18 June 2024 (UTC)
:::::::::I suspect coordination would start off at what we are de facto doing now in a haphazard and likely arbitrary manner, which is checking that reviews are 1) not checklists, 2) do source checks. I doubt it would crack down too much on being over-picky, especially as there is a lot of grey zone in the criteria. [[User:Chipmunkdavis|CMD]] ([[User talk:Chipmunkdavis|talk]]) 11:02, 18 June 2024 (UTC)
:::::::::I think it's OK to point out issues that go beyond the GA criteria, so long as the nominator is clear that those comments don't need to be addressed to get the article to GA, and so long as there are not too many -- some nominators don't want to bring the article up to FA standards and shouldn't be asked to. But letting them know that a link is dead or MoS issues that are not in the GA criteria is fine, so long as they understand what's a GA comment and what is not. [[User:Mike Christie|Mike Christie]] ([[User_talk:Mike Christie|talk]] - [[Special:Contributions/Mike_Christie|contribs]] - [[User:Mike Christie/Reference library|library]]) 11:31, 18 June 2024 (UTC)
:Reducing the backlog by artificially throttling nominations does nothing to increase the rate of promotions of GAs. It is hiding the problem (we aren't getting enough GA reviews done and enough GAs promoted) by addressing the symptom of the problem rather than doing anything to improve the unwillingness of editors to do more reviews. We could decrease the backlog to zero by shutting down the whole GA process and cancelling all current nominations; do you think that would be an improvement? —[[User:David Eppstein|David Eppstein]] ([[User talk:David Eppstein|talk]]) 04:35, 17 June 2024 (UTC)
::{{tq|To the argument that limiting noms only hides the full backlog, it's about how the noms are weighted. Right now, these "power users" make up half the backlog despite being a minority of the total nominators. This is unfair to the people who wait months longer in line just so we can double, triple, quadruple dip.}} – Right there in the original post you're replying to. [[User:Thebiguglyalien|<span style="color:#324717">The</span><span style="color:#45631f">big</span><span style="color:#547826">ugly</span><span style="color:#68942f">alien</span>]] ([[User talk:Thebiguglyalien|<span style="color:sienna">talk</span>]]) 04:38, 17 June 2024 (UTC)
:::There is no line. Nobody requires review be done chronologically. Nobody will yell at your reviewer and you if your nomination attracts enough interest to get reviewed quickly. And we tried prioritizing frequent reviewers and new participants instead of listing nominations chronologically; it didn't help. —[[User:David Eppstein|David Eppstein]] ([[User talk:David Eppstein|talk]]) 04:55, 17 June 2024 (UTC)
::::I'm inclined to agree with David Eppstein here. When we tried to push first-time nominators and frequent reviewers to the front of the line, it just increased the number of GANs that had been sitting in the queue for six months or longer.{{pb}}I think the issue here is that the review process is still fairly daunting. No one wants to be yelled at for looking at an article, determining that there are no (or very few) problems, and then quick-passing the article. Conversely, no one wants to be yelled at for looking at an article, seeing that it's riddled with problems, and then quick-failing the article. Quick-passing and quick-failing articles are both seen as problematic, even though there's nothing wrong with the latter. {{pb}}Therefore, many reviewers find themselves having to conduct intensive reviews, which means that fairly long articles are often skipped over by all except the most experienced reviewers. Many of these long articles come from power editors, which may be why it seems like the power editors are dominating the GAN queue. &ndash; [[User:Epicgenius|Epicgenius]] ([[User talk:Epicgenius|talk]]) 14:26, 17 June 2024 (UTC)
:::::I'm not going to suggest a return to the old sort order (though I did prefer it), but I think it's wrong to say that "all it did was increase the age of the oldest GANs". That's exactly what you would expect from reducing the importance of age in the GAN sort order. It doesn't mean the old sort order achieved anything else, but neither is it evidence that it didn't make a difference. [[User:Mike Christie|Mike Christie]] ([[User_talk:Mike Christie|talk]] - [[Special:Contributions/Mike_Christie|contribs]] - [[User:Mike Christie/Reference library|library]]) 14:30, 17 June 2024 (UTC)
::::::I meant to say that the change in sort order increased wait times for nominators near the bottom of the list. Currently, the newest nominations are near the bottom of each section, and the oldest nominations are near the top. Back when we were using the other sort order, we were grouping the nominations by username, so users near the bottom of the list saw their wait times increase. Granted, the other sort order did help decrease wait times for first-time nominators, but I think that came at the expense of everyone else, which is what I was getting at. &ndash; [[User:Epicgenius|Epicgenius]] ([[User talk:Epicgenius|talk]]) 14:39, 17 June 2024 (UTC)
:::::::Wasn't that the point? If the sort order was causing those with better review ratios to have their wait times decreased (new submitters having a perfect ratio), then the system was achieving what it was meant to do. [[User:Chipmunkdavis|CMD]] ([[User talk:Chipmunkdavis|talk]]) 17:39, 17 June 2024 (UTC)
::::::::Yeah, in that respect, it was working as intended (i.e. people with better review-to-nomination ratios didn't have to wait as long).{{pb}}I was trying to make the point that reviewers' limited time was diverted to people who have a lot of reviews and relatively few or no GAs. If someone was a prolific reviewer but an even more prolific nominator, they would be disadvantaged; e.g. if they had 100 reviews and 200 nominations, they were pushed further down the review queue than someone with 100 reviews and 10 nominations. Power users are more likely to have dozens or hundreds of GAs, so under the old sort order, they would be inherently disadvantaged because of the raw numbers of GAs that they had (unless they conducted even more reviews to make up for this). {{pb}}Perhaps it may be a good idea to consider formatting the GAN lists as sortable tables. That way, reviewers could decide on whether to review nominations by people with better review-to-nomination ratios. &ndash; [[User:Epicgenius|Epicgenius]] ([[User talk:Epicgenius|talk]]) 18:23, 17 June 2024 (UTC)
:::::::::{{u|Epicgenius}} We could make [[User:ChristieBot/SortableGANoms]] more prominent somehow. Right now it's just a link above the nominations. [[User:Thebiguglyalien|<span style="color:#324717">The</span><span style="color:#45631f">big</span><span style="color:#547826">ugly</span><span style="color:#68942f">alien</span>]] ([[User talk:Thebiguglyalien|<span style="color:sienna">talk</span>]]) 18:37, 17 June 2024 (UTC)
::::::::::Thanks for the link. That is exactly what I was thinking, but I didn't even realize it already existed. &ndash; [[User:Epicgenius|Epicgenius]] ([[User talk:Epicgenius|talk]]) 18:59, 17 June 2024 (UTC)
::::::::::I was also unaware of this page until now, and second Epicgenius' comment immediately above. [[User:Trainsandotherthings|Trainsandotherthings]] ([[User talk:Trainsandotherthings|talk]]) 19:08, 17 June 2024 (UTC)
:::::::::::{{u|Thebiguglyalien}}, {{u|Epicgenius}}, {{u|Trainsandotherthings}}: this would be easy to do, and I agree it might be beneficial. That part of the layout is hardcoded in ChristieBot at the moment. If someone mocks up a GAN page header they think would be preferable, I can change the bot to hardcode that text, or possibly to transclude it. [[User:Mike Christie|Mike Christie]] ([[User_talk:Mike Christie|talk]] - [[Special:Contributions/Mike_Christie|contribs]] - [[User:Mike Christie/Reference library|library]]) 11:38, 18 June 2024 (UTC)
:::::Quickfails are not problematic in the slightest, as long as the reasoning is there. The difficulty is merely in the length of the average review. When people say "I'm not good at reviewing", what they actually mean is "I find reviewing tediously boring and don't want to do it", which is perfectly understandable.{{pb}}To prevent [[WP:DCGAR]] happening again, we have decided that quality reviews must be directly enforced through the [[WP:GACR|GA criteria]]. Now, each review must go over the prose, images, sourcing, and do a source spotcheck. At FAC, this is handled by multiple people, and the source spotcheck is not needed after the first successful nomination. We have got ourselves into a situation where the "lightweight review process" is multiple times more onerous than the heavyweight process.{{pb}}Is there a better way? After DCGAR, I remember that {{u|SandyGeorgia}} was encouraging the institution of GAN coordinators who would check reviews, as the FAC coordinators do. I think that option, in combination with lowering GACR standards, could help encourage reviewing—but only, of course, if editors with high nomination/review ratios want to pick up their own slack. [[User:AirshipJungleman29|&#126;~ AirshipJungleman29]] ([[User talk:AirshipJungleman29|talk]]) 15:05, 17 June 2024 (UTC)
::::::I agree, quickfails should not be problematic if done correctly. However, I noticed that nominators sometimes challenge GAN quickfails even if the reviewer has done everything correctly, e.g. [https://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=User_talk:Bneu2013&oldid=1228684846#I-485_review this thread] from a few days ago. I was trying to make the point that some reviewers may be afraid to quickfail articles because they fear being confronted by the nominator; sorry if that isn't clear. &ndash; [[User:Epicgenius|Epicgenius]] ([[User talk:Epicgenius|talk]]) 15:32, 17 June 2024 (UTC)
:::::::Indeed, and not even just quick fails, but any fail that takes less than a day or two. There are a couple of noms I've had on my mind for awhile that have been submitted with eg. unsourced sections, but the idea of pulling them out and failing them feels like more effort than it is worth. [[User:Chipmunkdavis|CMD]] ([[User talk:Chipmunkdavis|talk]]) 17:41, 17 June 2024 (UTC)
*'''Some thoughts''' generally agree with the above discussion that throttling noms doesn't solve the problem, that being stricter on reviews (i.e. quick failing) may push people to improve the quality more before nomming and that having a backlog in and of itself isn't necessarily a bad thing. My own reflections on the challenges of [[WP:GAN]] come down to a lack of incentive for reviewing articles. When I started nomination articles at [[WP:GAN]], I told myself that I would keep a 2-to-1 ratio of reviews versus my own GAs. I did that mostly out of fear of being ostracized by the community for not reciprocating. [[WP:DYK]] and [[WP:FLC]] provide good examples of the extremes (where [[WP:GAN]] is in the middle). DYK requires QPQ, increasing the QPQ requirements for frequent DYK users during backlogs. [[WP:FLC]] on the other hand, limits you to one active nomination at a time (allowing for a second nom after your first has substantial support). I would argue that neither process is running very well, with backlogs or lack of reviews still being a challenge.
:I think the most important thing to remember is that the purpose of recognition is to incentivize and encourage content ''creation''. So long as [[WP:GA]] encourages me and others to create fairly well-written articles, it's doing its job. To conclude on that point, I wouldn't support any changes that would limit the incentive for users (especially users who create a lot of good content) to keep writing. That little green icon will get up there at some point, it really doesn't matter when though.<span style="white-space:nowrap; font-family:Harlow Solid Italic;"><span style="font-size:small; color:teal;"> « Gonzo fan2007</span> [[User talk:Gonzo_fan2007|<small style="color:#2A2722">(talk)</small>]] @ </span> 15:07, 17 June 2024 (UTC)
:After reading the replies, I can say that I'm back in the "I don't know" camp, but at least we got a discussion going! I'm sympathetic to PMC's point above, and others that have expressed similar thoughts, that it's more of a cultural issue than anything that can be directly solved by fiddling with how we organize nominations. But it just happens that most of the people close to GA's "culture" monitor and participate in this talk page, so this is where any concentrated change would happen. Personally I've been trying to be more open to failing nominations that weren't ready to be nominated. [[User:Thebiguglyalien|<span style="color:#324717">The</span><span style="color:#45631f">big</span><span style="color:#547826">ugly</span><span style="color:#68942f">alien</span>]] ([[User talk:Thebiguglyalien|<span style="color:sienna">talk</span>]]) 18:36, 17 June 2024 (UTC)
::Replying to myself so I can think aloud and express general thoughts. My takeaway here is that consensus is ''against'' limiting our own nominations as a means to reduce the backlog, and instead we should be more willing to fail nominations if they're not ready for a GAN review. Maybe we should be a little more firm with nominators who make a scene about reviewers who fail a nom, in the same way that we're being more firm with nominators who make a scene about inadequate reviews. I still don't love that the most active content writers have such a disproportionate number of nominations, but good points have been raised about other factors at play there. At the end of the day, like {{u|SusunW}} said, there's really no way to incentivize reviewing for someone whose focus on Wikipedia isn't reviewing and trying to do this can be counterproductive. And like I've said before, GAN reviewing is harder than other reviews because all of the pressure is on the one reviewer, even if they're better at reviewing some aspects than others (looking at you, source reviews). [[User:Thebiguglyalien|<span style="color:#324717">The</span><span style="color:#45631f">big</span><span style="color:#547826">ugly</span><span style="color:#68942f">alien</span>]] ([[User talk:Thebiguglyalien|<span style="color:sienna">talk</span>]]) 01:40, 18 June 2024 (UTC)
:My answer to this problem has been the same for a while now: I don't review nominations of those who refuse to meaningfully contribute to reviewing (and have a decent number of GAs, I'm not punishing people doing their first ever nomination). But when I see someone with 50 GAs and 0 reviews, I cannot in good conscience ever take up one of their nominations. I work hard to keep my review/GA ratio close to 1, so I'm not expecting anyone to do something I wouldn't do myself. We need a cultural shift towards this mindset, in my opinion (and some will disagree with me, which is their right). We also have the age-old problem of how to incentivize reviewers, which many brighter than I have tried to solve. {{pb}} I think large numbers of open nominations are in part a symptom of these known issues, excluding the (thankfully rare) bad actor nominating crappy articles en masse (and I'm sure some of you know exactly who I am referring to). Bottom line - when I see people argue so strongly against any reform yet refuse to do any reviews themselves, I really have no sympathy for them. If you don't want to do reviews, fine, but don't expect others to prioritize your nominations. [[User:Trainsandotherthings|Trainsandotherthings]] ([[User talk:Trainsandotherthings|talk]]) 18:52, 17 June 2024 (UTC)
::been watching this conversation quietly - completely agree with the above that this is a cultural problem that really needs a broader informal shift rather than acute reforms addressing only the symptoms. <span style="color:#618A3D">... [[User:Sawyer777|<span style="color:#618A3D">sawyer</span>]] * <small>he/they</small> * [[User talk:Sawyer777|<span style="color:#618A3D">talk</span>]]</span> 01:08, 18 June 2024 (UTC)
:Comment – Every time these discussions come up I am less inclined to participate in the GA process, if I am being honest. I find the pressure to review more articles disheartening. Encouraging reviews is fine, reforming the processes is good too, but discouraging writing and limiting collaboration for improving articles is counter-productive. The entire point of GA, IMO, is improving article quality, but if all we are to do is focus on pushing reviews through, the processes begins to focus more on quantity, which to my mind is how we end up with so many poorly written articles to begin with. We are a very diverse community of volunteers. Not everyone's skill-sets are the same and assuming that we can all do the same tasks equally well fails to recognize our diversity. The constant chastisement of people who don't review more doesn't encourage people to participate, but in fact does the opposite, at least for me. (For the record, I have nominated only 1 GA all year (at the request of the reviewer). Although I have written articles that would benefit from collaboration, I have not nominated them, but forced myself instead to review other's work. I spent over a month helping an editor at peer review prepare their first FA nomination, reviewed 5 FA/GA nominations. Not big numbers to some people's standards, but that required a huge amount of effort for me, as my reviews are meticulous, and I am incapable of making them less so. I see no value in holding anyone to my standards, but rather think that all contributions which lead to a better encyclopedia are valuable.) [[User:SusunW|SusunW]] ([[User talk:SusunW|talk]]) 20:59, 17 June 2024 (UTC)
::My comment was not directed at you, I specifically pointed the finger at people who refuse to review ''at all''. [[User:Trainsandotherthings|Trainsandotherthings]] ([[User talk:Trainsandotherthings|talk]]) 21:36, 17 June 2024 (UTC)
:::{{u|Trainsandotherthings}}, I didn't mean to imply that it was. If I did, I apologize. Communication is sometimes quite challenging {{wink}} [[User:SusunW|SusunW]] ([[User talk:SusunW|talk]]) 21:41, 17 June 2024 (UTC)
::Generally I think we should try to be more positive about all contributors here. Perhaps we should celebrate reviewers more (COI alert: I tend to review more than I write) instead of looking down at non-reviewers (although it is a very human thing to do). I like reviewing {{u|SusunW}}'s biographies (and I really enjoy working with her) so I am sad there have been so few of them here recently.
::I am very interested in seeing whether the [[WP:GARC|review circles]] idea can work as a (completely voluntary) way where people who are OK with doing some reviewing get their own nomination reviewed faster. If this becomes popular, people will have a choice: do a review to get your own nom reviewed very soon/put your nom on the pile with no questions asked about reviewing (and that means you may have to wait until the next backlog drive). —[[User:Kusma|Kusma]] ([[User talk:Kusma|talk]]) 09:32, 18 June 2024 (UTC)
:::Thank you {{u|Kusma}} I enjoy working with you too a lot. I am going to rip a bandaid off here and be vulnerable for a minute, but maybe it will help some people understand that reviewing is not simple for everyone. When I review I file, I tell myself, this time I am just going to read it, make comments, do a spot check and move on. But that never happens, ever. I read through the article. I start a 2nd read through and when I get to the first citation, I check it. I tell myself at the second citation to just accept it, but my brain says, what if it doesn't verify the information or has a copyvio? You have to sign-off that it's okay, so I check it. And this continues through every single citation. If I find an inconsistency, instead of just asking the question do you have a source that supports this?, I must know if there is a source. Or, I encounter something that the context is unclear. If a source is off-line do I AGF? Totally depends on whether other checks have had no problems. So I research (sometimes for hours) to find a reference that supports the data, provides context, or is accessible. Only if I cannot find a source do I just ask the question.
:::By this time, an entire day has passed and I am probably only 1/3 to 1/2 way through the article, so I post what I have from my notes to WP. I rewrite each query to make sure that what I am asking is clear and a suggestion, not a demand. I preview it and rewrite it again before I finally save it and move on. Day 2 and Day 3 are more of the same until I finally reach the end of the article, drained and exhausted. I hope that the nominator will take at least a day to respond to give me time to regroup. I review the responses as meticulously as I did the queries and finally make a decision on the outcome. Instead of feeling successful, my feeling is relief that it's over. And then I see a post on this page, admonishing people about not doing enough reviews and I force myself to do it again. The struggle is real, and it is hard. Howie Mandel once said I know my approach is not logical, but in spite of that I am compelled to do the illogical. That's me. We cannot assume we know why people don't do reviews, but we can change our approach to one which encourages people to do what they can. (And yes, I rewrote this 5 times.) [[User:SusunW|SusunW]] ([[User talk:SusunW|talk]]) 16:04, 18 June 2024 (UTC)
::::Thanks for taking the time to write this out Susun. The work you have done over the years to improve articles on here has been amazing and very inspiring, it has always been a pleasure to read what you have written and to work with you not only on reviews but other projects too. It's heartbreaking to hear you have been so discouraged by these periodic discussions on reviews, and I apologise profusely if I have contributed to that discouragement. Discouraging others from doing such good work should ''never'' be what we aim to accomplish here, and it is not a good sign if we are going in that direction. I agree completely that we need to reevaluate how to encourage more reviews without discouraging nominations, and to be more holistically positive towards each other. --[[User:Grnrchst|Grnrchst]] ([[User talk:Grnrchst|talk]]) 19:40, 18 June 2024 (UTC)
::::So—to be direct—you find GA reviewing difficult because you don't actually do GA reviews. [[User:AirshipJungleman29|&#126;~ AirshipJungleman29]] ([[User talk:AirshipJungleman29|talk]]) 20:15, 18 June 2024 (UTC)
:::::{{u|Grnrchst}} we're all good. I honestly just wanted to offer a different perspective to remind everyone that we don't all have the same access and abilities. The internet has been a great bridge but its anonymous nature can also make us forget that there is a real human on the other side. I don't often speak of my struggles, but perhaps it can help us be more "holistically positive towards each other". {{u|AirshipJungleman29}} I am uncertain what you are saying, I do and have done GA reviews. [[User:SusunW|SusunW]] ([[User talk:SusunW|talk]]) 20:26, 18 June 2024 (UTC)
:My two centimes: Since my foray into good article nominations, I have tried to maintain at least 2 reviews for each nomination. Not only do I enjoy reviewing articles, because it gives me a way to read in-depth on subjects that I normally wouldn't have spent more time on, but I also try to be a net contributor to cutting down the backlog. My frustrations with the ever-growing backlog has, at least in part, come from a selfishness on my part.
:Off the top of my head, there are at least a couple dozen or so articles that I have written to (I think) a GA standard, but which I haven't nominated due to the length of time it takes for nominations to get reviewed. Often I'll end up finishing an article, having polished off its prose and gone through every source I have in a number of languages, but then I just don't end up nominating it because I already had a number of months-old pending nominations that I was anxious to get reviewed. I think the only time I have exceeded five open nominations is during the ongoing WiG edit-a-thon.
:I seriously regret that I have let my frustration at this process bubble over into support for certain restrictions, so I can't rightly support TBUA's proposal, despite understanding where he's coming from. The reason I want the backlog to be reduced is so that we can get ''more'' articles nominated, not restrict incoming nominations and punish some of our best writers. I would like applaud GMH Melbourne's recent review circles initiative, which I think could be an excellent way forward with encouraging more reviews. Let's consider making more positive projects like this, rather than imposing negative restrictions. --[[User:Grnrchst|Grnrchst]] ([[User talk:Grnrchst|talk]]) 20:12, 18 June 2024 (UTC)


== GAN page not updating ==
I just made this, which I plan to use as a footer when passing GANs, to help encourage others to review. If there's anything you think is missing from it, feel free to say so here or add to it - and of course, feel free to use it yourself. ''[[User:Dihydrogen Monoxide|dihydrogen monoxide]]'' <small>([[User talk:Dihydrogen Monoxide|H<sub>2</sub>O]])</small> 00:04, 5 April 2008 (UTC)
:I'll take you up on the offer to use the template. :) It's a very good idea. [[User:Vassyana|Vassyana]] ([[User talk:Vassyana|talk]]) 00:51, 5 April 2008 (UTC)
Maybe we could also add something like this to the GAN page: "If you nominate an article, please review at least one article as well. This will help reduce the backlog, and will help your own nomination to be processed sooner..." Something like that. I think that might encourage nominators to participate in the the review process as well. You think so? [[User:Noble Story|Noble Story]] ([[User talk:Noble Story|talk]]) 15:02, 5 April 2008 (UTC)
:That's been brought up a few times before...I was generally in favour of it, but (IIRC) it hasn't gone through because it creates the impression that you have to do something if you want your article reviewed. Not the best image. Plus, some people are great GA writers, but dodgy reviewers...you just get that. =/ ''[[User:Dihydrogen Monoxide|dihydrogen monoxide]]'' <small>([[User talk:Dihydrogen Monoxide|H<sub>2</sub>O]])</small> 02:33, 6 April 2008 (UTC)
Not a bad idea. I've nominated a candidate and do feel a mutual obligation in return. But conducting a review would be rather daunting, not being familiar with the minutiae of the Manual of Style, for example. If the page suggested a way in which I could spend an appropriate amolunt of time assisting in the GA process, however, I would be pleased to help, and am sure others would too. [[User:MikeHobday|MikeHobday]] ([[User talk:MikeHobday|talk]]) 13:49, 6 April 2008 (UTC)


It appears ChristieBot is getting partway through its run and then crashing before it can update the GAN page. I suspect I know what the problem is but I can't do anything about it till I get home this evening about eight hours from now, so GAN is not going to update until at least then. [[User:Mike Christie|Mike Christie]] ([[User_talk:Mike Christie|talk]] - [[Special:Contributions/Mike_Christie|contribs]] - [[User:Mike Christie/Reference library|library]]) 13:22, 18 June 2024 (UTC)
== [[Homerun (film)]]'s GA nomination currently on hold; input appreciated. ==


:The problem with bots like this is that they often have a [[bus factor]] of one. [[User:Thebiguglyalien|<span style="color:#324717">The</span><span style="color:#45631f">big</span><span style="color:#547826">ugly</span><span style="color:#68942f">alien</span>]] ([[User talk:Thebiguglyalien|<span style="color:sienna">talk</span>]]) 13:46, 18 June 2024 (UTC)
[[Homerun (film)]]'s GA nomination was placed on hold by [[User:Collectonian|Collectonian]], who appears to be an inexperienced reviewer. I disagree with some of his comments. Thus the [[Talk:Homerun (film)#GA Review|review]] would benefit from input from others who are familiar with film articles, the GA criteria or both. --[[User:Hildanknight|J.L.W.S. The Special One]] ([[User talk:Hildanknight|talk]]) 14:33, 5 April 2008 (UTC)
::Eight hours of decreasing backlog though. [[User:Chipmunkdavis|CMD]] ([[User talk:Chipmunkdavis|talk]]) 13:55, 18 June 2024 (UTC)
:::Should be fixed now, and I think I've fixed the underlying issue that caused it as well. [[User:Mike Christie|Mike Christie]] ([[User_talk:Mike Christie|talk]] - [[Special:Contributions/Mike_Christie|contribs]] - [[User:Mike Christie/Reference library|library]]) 23:55, 18 June 2024 (UTC)

Revision as of 15:51, 19 June 2024

MainCriteriaInstructionsNominationsJuly Backlog DriveMentorshipDiscussionReassessmentReport
Good article nominations
Good article nominations

This is the discussion page for good article nominations (GAN) and the good articles process in general. To ask a question or start a discussion about the good article nomination process, click the Add topic link above. Please check and see if your question may already be answered; click the link to the Frequently asked questions below or search the Archives below. If you are here to discuss concerns with a specific review, please consider discussing things with the reviewer first before posting here.

splitting the world history sections

at Wikipedia:Good articles/History, there are a few sections that are worth splitting in my opinion:

  • Historical figures - politicians (357 articles)
  • Historical figures - other (452 articles)
  • North American history (217 articles)
  • European history (326 articles)
  • Monarchs (365 articles)
  • Royalty and nobility (303 articles)

they're all getting difficult to read due to the giant walls of text. what are people's thoughts on how to split? ... sawyer * he/they * talk 19:37, 6 June 2024 (UTC)[reply]

Could split United States history into a subsection, which would make a small difference although I suspect that subsection would remain in need of splitting sooner rather than later. There are a couple of options for European history, British Isles history seems an obvious one as being easy to define geographically and has quite a few items, splitting on continental Europe geographically is a bit more tricky with anachronisms (eg. what do you do with Hungarian conquest of the Carpathian Basin), although clearly defined regions like Italy might work. There's probably a couple of obvious subgroups for Monarchy, Royalty, and Nobility with 20+ units, perhaps staring with Roman/Byzantine. CMD (talk) 02:34, 7 June 2024 (UTC)[reply]
yeah i think splitting geographically will make the most sense, even with edge cases. splitting off British & US-American items would be a great first step ... sawyer * he/they * talk 02:44, 7 June 2024 (UTC)[reply]
Many of the figures in Historical figures - other are miscategorized. Many of them are nobility, and should be put in the Royalty and nobility section. Some are military figures, and should be put in the military people section. Religious figures should put under religion, artists under their respective sections, etc. There's even some animals, which should be filed under Animal domestic breeds, types, and individuals.
For politicians, monarchs, nobility, etc. it seems like they could be split by continent.

Generalissima (talk) (it/she) 14:15, 7 June 2024 (UTC)[reply]

Added in animals to their proper section. Generalissima (talk) (it/she) 14:21, 7 June 2024 (UTC)[reply]
If shifting Animals from Wikipedia:Good articles/History to Wikipedia:Good articles/Natural sciences, please remember to change the topic on the article talk pages as well. CMD (talk) 14:27, 7 June 2024 (UTC)[reply]
Ah. i am about to run and can't do that atm - id really appreciate it if anyone could Generalissima (talk) (it/she) 14:30, 7 June 2024 (UTC)[reply]
Ah, didn't realise you'd already started. I'll handle the 12 moved, despite personal misgivings that the animals were likely mostly respectable historical figures. CMD (talk) 15:14, 7 June 2024 (UTC)[reply]
i'll start moving some of the "other" figures into their proper sections, so that we can know what the actual makeup of the "other" section is. ... sawyer * he/they * talk 15:15, 7 June 2024 (UTC)[reply]
Done up to the Os of these, was reverted on Nelson (cat) by Tim O'Doherty. There is also Judy (dog) in Warfare. CMD (talk) 15:21, 7 June 2024 (UTC)[reply]
Hi CMD, sorry about that. I'd say it's closer to history than natural sciences. Happy to discuss. Cheers - Tim O'Doherty (talk) 15:24, 7 June 2024 (UTC)[reply]
I'm not strongly opinionated, aside from feeling it would be best to have something clear and consistent for animal individuals. Might split them into their own lv5 for a start, there's about 25 and I'm not seeing the natural link with breeds/types. CMD (talk) 15:40, 7 June 2024 (UTC)[reply]
I've split off the individuals (there were 30, although given the articles are just single names the line length is relatively short) and saved Olaf the Peacock. Would be good to hear more thoughts on where they should go. CMD (talk) 16:16, 10 June 2024 (UTC)[reply]
Shifted Judy as well and finished the matching. If there is a consensus to move them, should be easier to now move them all together. CMD (talk) 02:01, 14 June 2024 (UTC)[reply]
i noticed that too. & i think by continent would work pretty well. ... sawyer * he/they * talk 14:22, 7 June 2024 (UTC)[reply]

Does a previous failure to meet GA criteria stay on?

I recently reviewed and promoted Tamil Nadu to Good Article status. It was unsuccessfully nominated a decade ago and the old notification of failure to meet GA is on the Talk page. Does that notification stay on the Talk page, even though it's now a GA? It seems to contradict the current status unless read carefully. Mr Serjeant Buzfuz (talk) 13:23, 12 June 2024 (UTC)[reply]

I tried to merge the new review into the {{Article history}} template. The important bit is to update the "current status". —Kusma (talk) 13:52, 12 June 2024 (UTC)[reply]
Looks good. Thanks. Mr Serjeant Buzfuz (talk) 23:38, 12 June 2024 (UTC)[reply]

GA quickfail discussion

I recently opened a discussion at WT:USRD#Failed GA regarding a GA review I quickfailed. It would be good if I could get some input regarding my action. Bneu2013 (talk) 22:08, 12 June 2024 (UTC)[reply]

I'm not too sure if this article meets the criteria for what makes a good article. At a glimpse:

  • Amateurish prose: Indeed, due to the fact these places...
    • Thus in the goal to inherit the company, Fusajiro was adopted...
    • Fusajiro then has the idea of using the Hanafuda cards of lesser quality...
    • Many other examples of this.
  • Awkward wikilinking: Just as Hanafuda cards were allowed again in 1885 so too did occidental playing cards (Standard 52-card deck) become allowed...
  • Grammar errors: ...these western cards so called "Trump" by the japanese population...
  • Randomly inserted sentences: (The sen is a subdivision of the Japanese yen which became obsolete in 1954.)
  • Questionably sourced media (one is straight up ripped from Eurogamer)

The GAN review seems to be lacking as well, with a very light prose check, no discernible source spot check, and no copyright check, which I'm 99.8% sure is just an incorrectly-done review. Should I proceed with a reassessment request, or can this GAN be rescinded altogether? joeyquism (talk page) 01:12, 13 June 2024 (UTC)[reply]

That was a very recent GAN, closed 9 June 2024‎, it can be reopened if needed. First step is to raise it with the reviewer. CMD (talk) 01:18, 13 June 2024 (UTC)[reply]
I believe the lack of source and copyright checking and the amateurish prose are both grounds enough to go ahead and reopen the review. Of course I assume WP:GOODFAITH from both parties, but it seems that this is a case of WP:CIR. I've informed both the reviewer and nominator that the review has been reopened. joeyquism (talk page) 02:56, 13 June 2024 (UTC)[reply]
I think "amateurish" and "CIR" are a little harsh. It just looks like people who are working to learn best practices and could use some helpful advice—something that tends to be rarely given for up-and-coming editors. Thebiguglyalien (talk) 02:59, 13 June 2024 (UTC)[reply]
Fair enough - I didn't mean any offense by my use of these terms, just for the record. I've also extended a hand to both editors in case they are in need of any help during the GAN process. joeyquism (talk page) 03:07, 13 June 2024 (UTC)[reply]
Thank you for those very polite and well-worded talkpage messages. CMD (talk) 03:01, 13 June 2024 (UTC)[reply]
Forgot to reply to this - no problem. joeyquism (talk) 03:20, 16 June 2024 (UTC)[reply]

Do aviators fall under the subject section Transport?

Asking because unlike some of the other subject areas, Transport does not mention related people/professions as included, and none of the nominations currently there are for biographies. AddWittyNameHere 13:14, 13 June 2024 (UTC)[reply]

For what it's worth, when I reviewed Jean Batten, the article was placed under world history, historical figures: other. However, there is a section within transport entitled air transport people which might also be an option (and in fact I'm wondering if I put Batten in the wrong place). Trainsandotherthings (talk) 23:31, 13 June 2024 (UTC)[reply]
Good to know I'm not the only person uncertain of where to place a nomination, then! Mine might be a little more "squarely" placed in transport than Jean Batten because it's about an aviation pioneer that was also an airline transport pilot, so guess I'll go for transport, I suppose, but yeah, world history - historical figures was my other guess. (It could even technically fit under military because he was a military pilot for a brief portion of his career, too--but that's not what his notability comes from, so not a great fit altogether) AddWittyNameHere 23:39, 13 June 2024 (UTC)[reply]
@Trainsandotherthings Yeah I agree that Jean Batten fits better under "air transport people" than "world history, historical figures: other". That historical figure section is massive (400+ articles) while air transport people only has 9. Jean Batten's article and achievement is also similar to Juan Bielovucic, who is already listed within the air transport people category. OhanaUnitedTalk page 13:57, 14 June 2024 (UTC)[reply]
I've moved Batten to air transport people. Hopefully I did it correctly. Trainsandotherthings (talk) 14:26, 14 June 2024 (UTC)[reply]

GAN sorting uses different categories than Good Article nominations?

Is there a reason why User:SDZeroBot/GAN sorting uses a different category system than Wikipedia:Good article nominations? I was looking for a few articles in "GAN sorting" to see how long they had been waiting for reviews, but the categories don't match up at all; the only way to find an article was to do word searches by the article name. For example, Charlemagne is listed under the "History" category in "Good Article nominations", but under "Culture/Biography" in "GAN sorting"; Fair Work Ombudsman v Quest South Perth is listed under "Social sciences and society/Law" in "Good Article nominations", but under "Geography/Regions/Oceania" in "GAN sorting". It would be helpful if both lists used the same categories. Mr Serjeant Buzfuz (talk) 13:44, 13 June 2024 (UTC)[reply]

The bot's sorting is done automatically using a machine learning tool, and includes articles under every topic it thinks is relevant (so you will see that Charlemagne, for example, is listed as "Geography/Regions/Europe/Western Europe" and "History and Society/History" among other topics). I imagine they differ because the ORES classification was developed after the already-existing GA system, and they weren't concerned with making them compatible - the ORES system the bot uses is used to categorise e.g. AfDs as well as GAs, which had developed its own categorisation.
I suppose we could change the way the WP:GAN page works to sort articles using the bot rather than the current system, but that seems like a bunch of work for no clear benefit. Caeciliusinhorto-public (talk) 13:55, 13 June 2024 (UTC)[reply]
The benefit is that it makes it easier to use both pages. There is no way to use the Sorting page to sort by the categories on the GA nominations page. Suppose I want to see the oldest article in the History category on the GA Nominations page, to review it because someone’s been waiting a long time for it. There’s no way to do that, because the History articles are scattered about by an entirely different category system, putting Charlemagne in “Culture/Biography”. There’s no way to see the oldest “Law” articles waiting for a review: the decision of the High Court of Australia (Fair work) is sorted under “Geography”. I don’t see any benefit from having a sorting system that isn’t based on the categories used on the Good Articles nomination page. Mr Serjeant Buzfuz (talk) 14:09, 13 June 2024 (UTC)[reply]
There’s also the point that relying on a bot/AI to determine the categories is less useful than relying on the judgment of the nominator who decides which category to put an article in when they nominate it. The decision of the Australian High Court in the Fair Work article is notable as an article about an important legal issue from the highest court in Australia. But the bot ignored that, and decided it was most notable because of its geographic location. Judgment by a human is more accurate here than a bot. Mr Serjeant Buzfuz (talk) 14:15, 13 June 2024 (UTC)[reply]
If you don't want to rely on the AI classification (I never do!) then you shouldn't use the bot which uses AI classification. You can use User:ChristieBot/SortableGANoms if you want a sortable list which uses the manual categories. (But in the specific case you are talking about the bot did classify Fair Work Ombudsman v Quest South Perth under History and Society/Politics and government; the ability to classify a nomination into multiple relevant categories seems like a useful feature actually!) Caeciliusinhorto-public (talk) 14:41, 13 June 2024 (UTC)[reply]

GA summary on list pages

Raising this change for discussion here. Removing the repeated summary seems reasonable, but making the navigation more inaccessible is going to add further friction to the manual cleanups needed by making it harder to switch between lists. Wondering if there is a way to keep some sort of more compact navigation bar at the top. CMD (talk) 14:13, 15 June 2024 (UTC)[reply]

It should be consistent between the different GA pages. There's no point if each one has a different style for navigation Lee Vilenski (talk • contribs) 15:08, 15 June 2024 (UTC)[reply]
All pages used Wikipedia:Good articles/Summary, what this change did was hide it. CMD (talk) 16:21, 15 June 2024 (UTC)[reply]
Pinging @Prhartcom as the person who hid the summary (twice).
My take is that this should be consistent across all of the different GA topic subpages, though I see this has been done on all of these pages. A compact navigation bar would be great as well, if that's possible. – Epicgenius (talk) 15:37, 17 June 2024 (UTC)[reply]
Thanks for the ping and the feedback. Glad everyone likes it. Oh all right, I suppose now we do need a compact navigation bar to each of the 15 topic pages; I will start work on that. It will be very clear yet simple, similar to the page contents seen at the top of the Wikipedia:Good articles/all page (that combines all the topic pages). Cheers, Prhartcom (talk) 03:06, 19 June 2024 (UTC)[reply]
All right, I did it; its on the Wikipedia:Good articles/Warfare page only right now. Next I'll make it a template and put it on all the topic pages. Hope it's okay? Prhartcom (talk) 03:26, 19 June 2024 (UTC)[reply]
A definite help. Is there a reason not to have it in columns given the apparent desire to save vertical space? CMD (talk) 04:46, 19 June 2024 (UTC)[reply]

Song articles without sigcov of the song

Oftentimes when looking at song GANs, there are several nominations where all of the sourcing is about the album and none of the sources are specifically about the song. This raises some notability issues and goes against WP:NSONG, but how should we handle this at GAN? There's of course the perennial dispute about whether non-notable articles should be passed through GA. But besides that, can these song articles pass criteria 2 and 3 if all of the sources are about the album? These are common enough that I feel some sort of consensus or precedent should be established. Thebiguglyalien (talk) 05:17, 16 June 2024 (UTC)[reply]

Well, either the article is notable, and can be a GA, or it's non-notable and should be deleted. AfD is the likely place to work that out. Lee Vilenski (talk • contribs) 09:49, 16 June 2024 (UTC)[reply]

Nominator temp-blocked as a sock-puppeteer

Hey all. A GA nominator whose article I was reviewing has just been temporarily banned for one month for sock-puppeteering. I haven't had to deal with a case of a nominator being blocked mid-review so I don't know what to do. Should I leave the review on hold, pending their return? Or should I just close the review as failed? (I still don't think it meets GA criteria as of now). --Grnrchst (talk) 10:52, 16 June 2024 (UTC)[reply]

I would suggest failing it; they can always renominate if they still want to after they return from the block. Mike Christie (talk - contribs - library) 11:25, 16 June 2024 (UTC)[reply]
Gone ahead and failed it. Thanks for the advice. --Grnrchst (talk) 12:09, 16 June 2024 (UTC)[reply]

I've changed my mind about hard caps on open nominations

In the past, I've objected to hard caps on how many nominations someone can have open at once. My reasoning was that it's unfair punishment to our most active content creators and that it only masks the problem. After running the numbers, I believe these arguments are outweighed by other factors.

As of the most recent GAN report, there are 677 nominations under review or awaiting a reviewer. There are 58 nominators with at least three nominations, making up 340 noms in total. We make up almost exactly half of the backlog. If we emptied the "Nominators with multiple nominations" section by reducing everyone down to two noms, the backlog would instantly decrease by 224 nominations, bringing us down to 453. That's one third of the total backlog just made of those extra nominations. If we limit it to a more generous five noms, that's still 95 extra nominations beyond that limit.

To the argument that limiting noms only hides the full backlog, it's about how the noms are weighted. Right now, these "power users" make up half the backlog despite being a minority of the total nominators. This is unfair to the people who wait months longer in line just so we can double, triple, quadruple dip. To the argument that it makes it harder for efficient nominators to nominate, there's a way to make your nom a higher priority: review! Review the noms above yours in that category, or just review in general to lower the backlog. Even if new noms instantly take their place, those will have a more recent nom date. This way, there won't be one person who still has eight other nominations ahead of you after you review one of theirs. Or you could review for people who only have one nom and won't immediately replace it, which is often a new nominator who should get priority anyway. Alternatively, there's Wikipedia:Good article review circles where you can get a reviewer much more quickly.

Once my current nominations are done, I'm going to voluntarily limit myself to no more than five at a time. But these limits only have significant effect if we adhere to them collectively, and I'm switching to a support !vote on such a measure. I'm also going to ping the few people who have more open noms than I do in case they'd be interested in a similar voluntary limitation: Magentic Manifestations, Chiswick Chap, Aszx5000, Gonzo fan2007, Ippantekina, Aintabli, Epicgenius. Thebiguglyalien (talk) 02:22, 17 June 2024 (UTC)[reply]

Frankly, I think this is not a very good idea. The "power users" are often our most experienced and dedicated contributors - so notably, they tend to have articles that are high quality to begin with and thus easier to review. Reviewing a newer editor's GAN is often far more difficult, because they aren't used to all the inns and outs yet - this takes an entirely separate skillset from reviewing an Epicgenius or Chiswick GAN (namely, that only an experienced reviewer would be as good at it!) I really don't looking at reducing the backlog as a numbers game is beneficial; what's important is getting articles reviewed in timely manner, which I don't think the "power users"' GAs are contributing to. Generalissima (talk) (it/she) 02:46, 17 June 2024 (UTC)[reply]
Oh dear, this old chestnut again. I'll just say that it's bound to have something like the Poisson distribution, that's just how nature is. Chiswick Chap (talk) 03:39, 17 June 2024 (UTC)[reply]
Yes, generally an experienced editor's work is easier to review, given that the length and complexity of the article are the same. But by sheer volume, one experienced editor with lots of noms, myself included, is going to squeeze out those newer nominators who need the most attention. And like I said above, reviewing those nominations would be incentivized relative to an experienced nominator, as newer nominators wouldn't immediately have another nom ready to go. It's not a numbers game, it's about weight, and it would be fewer articles at a time being reviewed more quickly than a whole block of them being reviewed slowly.
And to approach from the other angle, I believe we should more readily (quick)fail nominations that aren't ready for GAN. It shouldn't just be "is it far from the criteria" but whether it fails the criteria in a way that puts an undue burden on a reviewer. These are ones that probably shouldn't have been nominated anyway, but they take up a disproportionate amount of reviewer time. When nominations aren't ready, we can direct editors to peer review, GOCE, the Teahouse, help pages, or wherever depending on where its weaknesses are. I'd say a limit on max noms plus holding nominators accountable for making sure nominations are ready is the best combo. We could get nominations in and out much more quickly that way while using GAN as a lightweight quality assurance/verification process instead of as Peer Review 2. Thebiguglyalien (talk) 03:44, 17 June 2024 (UTC)[reply]
Unfortunately, the trend has been to increase GA standards rather than to accept that GAs aren't expected to be perfect (and that no article is, honestly). I doubt we'll secure any kind of consensus for returning GA to the lightweight process it was written as. ♠PMC(talk) 04:29, 17 June 2024 (UTC)[reply]
Given how little oversight there is, there's really nothing stopping individual reviewers from deciding how strict or lenient they want to be with the criteria, with failing, or with how they think the process should work. Thebiguglyalien (talk) 04:37, 17 June 2024 (UTC)[reply]
Generally I'd agree, except that people who are "caught" doing reviews that others find inadequate are regularly dragged here and castigated. And when mistakes are caught in a GA that passed, reviewers catch flak for it.
On the other hand, people don't like being the "bad guy" and failing articles that aren't ready, so we give infinite time and chances for articles that frankly aren't up to snuff. Some noms will get upset that you failed their article, and nobody likes being on the other end of that conflict.
Basically, there's a competing social pressure to be incredibly thorough yet infinitely forgiving. Reviewers can't win, they get discouraged, and difficult articles sit around for ages. We need to change the culture around GA reviewing if we ever want to make a meaningful change in the backlog. ♠PMC(talk) 04:54, 17 June 2024 (UTC)[reply]
Honestly, I'd be willing to strike out everything I said above and go in the opposite direction. We could just as easily say it's a free for all on nominating but then be more firm with reviewing and quickfailing so weak noms don't bog us down. I'm actually more inclined toward that than a hard cap, except right now there's no consistency in reviews, and of course many nominators feel entitled to a pass. I personally am willing to be the one to say "this isn't ready for nomination" (and I have been trying to look for those nominations lately), but like you said, it needs to be part of a broader cultural change.
I'm going off on a slight tangent now, but I believe there are more sub-standard reviews that slip through the cracks than ones that get "caught". I watch many of them go by feeling like my hands are tied because there's also a stigma against accusing people of doing bad reviews, and it's gotten to the point where I just ignore them unless they start reviewing one of mine, in which case I ask them to return it. Thebiguglyalien (talk) 12:34, 17 June 2024 (UTC)[reply]
I prefer to review the new nominators, starting with the ones who have done reviews, which usually means a higher failure rate and slower reviews for the passes because they are learning. I do this because I believe in encouraging a good review/nomination ratio, but another benefit is that it is an opportunity to teach those nominators how a good review should look. Mike Christie (talk - contribs - library) 13:12, 17 June 2024 (UTC)[reply]
I strongly disagree there is a stigma against accusing people of doing bad reviews. People do it on this talk page regularly, and the prospect of being publicly shamed creates a chilling effect for new reviewers.
I do want to point out the contradiction between suggesting that we use "GAN as a lightweight quality assurance/verification process" and saying reviewers should basically review how they want, but then bringing up "sub-standard reviews". We can't have speed and perfection. Either we accept that the process is supposed to be lightweight and allow reviews to be lightweight, or we keep tightening the screws and watch the backlog climb. ♠PMC(talk) 14:12, 17 June 2024 (UTC)[reply]
I'm probably part of the problem -- I can't really do "lightweight" reviews. I personally want peer reviews and suggestions to improve my articles much more than I care about another green plus, and so my reviews tend to be in depth and address more than the GA criteria. And nobody calls me out on this, even for monstrosities like Talk:Chinese characters/GA1. I am not sure whether dedicated coordinators who look at every review for some quality assurance would help or harm, but this might be worth brainstorming about. —Kusma (talk) 09:49, 18 June 2024 (UTC)[reply]
I suspect coordination would start off at what we are de facto doing now in a haphazard and likely arbitrary manner, which is checking that reviews are 1) not checklists, 2) do source checks. I doubt it would crack down too much on being over-picky, especially as there is a lot of grey zone in the criteria. CMD (talk) 11:02, 18 June 2024 (UTC)[reply]
I think it's OK to point out issues that go beyond the GA criteria, so long as the nominator is clear that those comments don't need to be addressed to get the article to GA, and so long as there are not too many -- some nominators don't want to bring the article up to FA standards and shouldn't be asked to. But letting them know that a link is dead or MoS issues that are not in the GA criteria is fine, so long as they understand what's a GA comment and what is not. Mike Christie (talk - contribs - library) 11:31, 18 June 2024 (UTC)[reply]
Reducing the backlog by artificially throttling nominations does nothing to increase the rate of promotions of GAs. It is hiding the problem (we aren't getting enough GA reviews done and enough GAs promoted) by addressing the symptom of the problem rather than doing anything to improve the unwillingness of editors to do more reviews. We could decrease the backlog to zero by shutting down the whole GA process and cancelling all current nominations; do you think that would be an improvement? —David Eppstein (talk) 04:35, 17 June 2024 (UTC)[reply]
To the argument that limiting noms only hides the full backlog, it's about how the noms are weighted. Right now, these "power users" make up half the backlog despite being a minority of the total nominators. This is unfair to the people who wait months longer in line just so we can double, triple, quadruple dip. – Right there in the original post you're replying to. Thebiguglyalien (talk) 04:38, 17 June 2024 (UTC)[reply]
There is no line. Nobody requires review be done chronologically. Nobody will yell at your reviewer and you if your nomination attracts enough interest to get reviewed quickly. And we tried prioritizing frequent reviewers and new participants instead of listing nominations chronologically; it didn't help. —David Eppstein (talk) 04:55, 17 June 2024 (UTC)[reply]
I'm inclined to agree with David Eppstein here. When we tried to push first-time nominators and frequent reviewers to the front of the line, it just increased the number of GANs that had been sitting in the queue for six months or longer.
I think the issue here is that the review process is still fairly daunting. No one wants to be yelled at for looking at an article, determining that there are no (or very few) problems, and then quick-passing the article. Conversely, no one wants to be yelled at for looking at an article, seeing that it's riddled with problems, and then quick-failing the article. Quick-passing and quick-failing articles are both seen as problematic, even though there's nothing wrong with the latter.
Therefore, many reviewers find themselves having to conduct intensive reviews, which means that fairly long articles are often skipped over by all except the most experienced reviewers. Many of these long articles come from power editors, which may be why it seems like the power editors are dominating the GAN queue. – Epicgenius (talk) 14:26, 17 June 2024 (UTC)[reply]
I'm not going to suggest a return to the old sort order (though I did prefer it), but I think it's wrong to say that "all it did was increase the age of the oldest GANs". That's exactly what you would expect from reducing the importance of age in the GAN sort order. It doesn't mean the old sort order achieved anything else, but neither is it evidence that it didn't make a difference. Mike Christie (talk - contribs - library) 14:30, 17 June 2024 (UTC)[reply]
I meant to say that the change in sort order increased wait times for nominators near the bottom of the list. Currently, the newest nominations are near the bottom of each section, and the oldest nominations are near the top. Back when we were using the other sort order, we were grouping the nominations by username, so users near the bottom of the list saw their wait times increase. Granted, the other sort order did help decrease wait times for first-time nominators, but I think that came at the expense of everyone else, which is what I was getting at. – Epicgenius (talk) 14:39, 17 June 2024 (UTC)[reply]
Wasn't that the point? If the sort order was causing those with better review ratios to have their wait times decreased (new submitters having a perfect ratio), then the system was achieving what it was meant to do. CMD (talk) 17:39, 17 June 2024 (UTC)[reply]
Yeah, in that respect, it was working as intended (i.e. people with better review-to-nomination ratios didn't have to wait as long).
I was trying to make the point that reviewers' limited time was diverted to people who have a lot of reviews and relatively few or no GAs. If someone was a prolific reviewer but an even more prolific nominator, they would be disadvantaged; e.g. if they had 100 reviews and 200 nominations, they were pushed further down the review queue than someone with 100 reviews and 10 nominations. Power users are more likely to have dozens or hundreds of GAs, so under the old sort order, they would be inherently disadvantaged because of the raw numbers of GAs that they had (unless they conducted even more reviews to make up for this).
Perhaps it may be a good idea to consider formatting the GAN lists as sortable tables. That way, reviewers could decide on whether to review nominations by people with better review-to-nomination ratios. – Epicgenius (talk) 18:23, 17 June 2024 (UTC)[reply]
Epicgenius We could make User:ChristieBot/SortableGANoms more prominent somehow. Right now it's just a link above the nominations. Thebiguglyalien (talk) 18:37, 17 June 2024 (UTC)[reply]
Thanks for the link. That is exactly what I was thinking, but I didn't even realize it already existed. – Epicgenius (talk) 18:59, 17 June 2024 (UTC)[reply]
I was also unaware of this page until now, and second Epicgenius' comment immediately above. Trainsandotherthings (talk) 19:08, 17 June 2024 (UTC)[reply]
Thebiguglyalien, Epicgenius, Trainsandotherthings: this would be easy to do, and I agree it might be beneficial. That part of the layout is hardcoded in ChristieBot at the moment. If someone mocks up a GAN page header they think would be preferable, I can change the bot to hardcode that text, or possibly to transclude it. Mike Christie (talk - contribs - library) 11:38, 18 June 2024 (UTC)[reply]
Quickfails are not problematic in the slightest, as long as the reasoning is there. The difficulty is merely in the length of the average review. When people say "I'm not good at reviewing", what they actually mean is "I find reviewing tediously boring and don't want to do it", which is perfectly understandable.
To prevent WP:DCGAR happening again, we have decided that quality reviews must be directly enforced through the GA criteria. Now, each review must go over the prose, images, sourcing, and do a source spotcheck. At FAC, this is handled by multiple people, and the source spotcheck is not needed after the first successful nomination. We have got ourselves into a situation where the "lightweight review process" is multiple times more onerous than the heavyweight process.
Is there a better way? After DCGAR, I remember that SandyGeorgia was encouraging the institution of GAN coordinators who would check reviews, as the FAC coordinators do. I think that option, in combination with lowering GACR standards, could help encourage reviewing—but only, of course, if editors with high nomination/review ratios want to pick up their own slack. ~~ AirshipJungleman29 (talk) 15:05, 17 June 2024 (UTC)[reply]
I agree, quickfails should not be problematic if done correctly. However, I noticed that nominators sometimes challenge GAN quickfails even if the reviewer has done everything correctly, e.g. this thread from a few days ago. I was trying to make the point that some reviewers may be afraid to quickfail articles because they fear being confronted by the nominator; sorry if that isn't clear. – Epicgenius (talk) 15:32, 17 June 2024 (UTC)[reply]
Indeed, and not even just quick fails, but any fail that takes less than a day or two. There are a couple of noms I've had on my mind for awhile that have been submitted with eg. unsourced sections, but the idea of pulling them out and failing them feels like more effort than it is worth. CMD (talk) 17:41, 17 June 2024 (UTC)[reply]
  • Some thoughts generally agree with the above discussion that throttling noms doesn't solve the problem, that being stricter on reviews (i.e. quick failing) may push people to improve the quality more before nomming and that having a backlog in and of itself isn't necessarily a bad thing. My own reflections on the challenges of WP:GAN come down to a lack of incentive for reviewing articles. When I started nomination articles at WP:GAN, I told myself that I would keep a 2-to-1 ratio of reviews versus my own GAs. I did that mostly out of fear of being ostracized by the community for not reciprocating. WP:DYK and WP:FLC provide good examples of the extremes (where WP:GAN is in the middle). DYK requires QPQ, increasing the QPQ requirements for frequent DYK users during backlogs. WP:FLC on the other hand, limits you to one active nomination at a time (allowing for a second nom after your first has substantial support). I would argue that neither process is running very well, with backlogs or lack of reviews still being a challenge.
I think the most important thing to remember is that the purpose of recognition is to incentivize and encourage content creation. So long as WP:GA encourages me and others to create fairly well-written articles, it's doing its job. To conclude on that point, I wouldn't support any changes that would limit the incentive for users (especially users who create a lot of good content) to keep writing. That little green icon will get up there at some point, it really doesn't matter when though. « Gonzo fan2007 (talk) @ 15:07, 17 June 2024 (UTC)[reply]
After reading the replies, I can say that I'm back in the "I don't know" camp, but at least we got a discussion going! I'm sympathetic to PMC's point above, and others that have expressed similar thoughts, that it's more of a cultural issue than anything that can be directly solved by fiddling with how we organize nominations. But it just happens that most of the people close to GA's "culture" monitor and participate in this talk page, so this is where any concentrated change would happen. Personally I've been trying to be more open to failing nominations that weren't ready to be nominated. Thebiguglyalien (talk) 18:36, 17 June 2024 (UTC)[reply]
Replying to myself so I can think aloud and express general thoughts. My takeaway here is that consensus is against limiting our own nominations as a means to reduce the backlog, and instead we should be more willing to fail nominations if they're not ready for a GAN review. Maybe we should be a little more firm with nominators who make a scene about reviewers who fail a nom, in the same way that we're being more firm with nominators who make a scene about inadequate reviews. I still don't love that the most active content writers have such a disproportionate number of nominations, but good points have been raised about other factors at play there. At the end of the day, like SusunW said, there's really no way to incentivize reviewing for someone whose focus on Wikipedia isn't reviewing and trying to do this can be counterproductive. And like I've said before, GAN reviewing is harder than other reviews because all of the pressure is on the one reviewer, even if they're better at reviewing some aspects than others (looking at you, source reviews). Thebiguglyalien (talk) 01:40, 18 June 2024 (UTC)[reply]
My answer to this problem has been the same for a while now: I don't review nominations of those who refuse to meaningfully contribute to reviewing (and have a decent number of GAs, I'm not punishing people doing their first ever nomination). But when I see someone with 50 GAs and 0 reviews, I cannot in good conscience ever take up one of their nominations. I work hard to keep my review/GA ratio close to 1, so I'm not expecting anyone to do something I wouldn't do myself. We need a cultural shift towards this mindset, in my opinion (and some will disagree with me, which is their right). We also have the age-old problem of how to incentivize reviewers, which many brighter than I have tried to solve.
I think large numbers of open nominations are in part a symptom of these known issues, excluding the (thankfully rare) bad actor nominating crappy articles en masse (and I'm sure some of you know exactly who I am referring to). Bottom line - when I see people argue so strongly against any reform yet refuse to do any reviews themselves, I really have no sympathy for them. If you don't want to do reviews, fine, but don't expect others to prioritize your nominations. Trainsandotherthings (talk) 18:52, 17 June 2024 (UTC)[reply]
been watching this conversation quietly - completely agree with the above that this is a cultural problem that really needs a broader informal shift rather than acute reforms addressing only the symptoms. ... sawyer * he/they * talk 01:08, 18 June 2024 (UTC)[reply]
Comment – Every time these discussions come up I am less inclined to participate in the GA process, if I am being honest. I find the pressure to review more articles disheartening. Encouraging reviews is fine, reforming the processes is good too, but discouraging writing and limiting collaboration for improving articles is counter-productive. The entire point of GA, IMO, is improving article quality, but if all we are to do is focus on pushing reviews through, the processes begins to focus more on quantity, which to my mind is how we end up with so many poorly written articles to begin with. We are a very diverse community of volunteers. Not everyone's skill-sets are the same and assuming that we can all do the same tasks equally well fails to recognize our diversity. The constant chastisement of people who don't review more doesn't encourage people to participate, but in fact does the opposite, at least for me. (For the record, I have nominated only 1 GA all year (at the request of the reviewer). Although I have written articles that would benefit from collaboration, I have not nominated them, but forced myself instead to review other's work. I spent over a month helping an editor at peer review prepare their first FA nomination, reviewed 5 FA/GA nominations. Not big numbers to some people's standards, but that required a huge amount of effort for me, as my reviews are meticulous, and I am incapable of making them less so. I see no value in holding anyone to my standards, but rather think that all contributions which lead to a better encyclopedia are valuable.) SusunW (talk) 20:59, 17 June 2024 (UTC)[reply]
My comment was not directed at you, I specifically pointed the finger at people who refuse to review at all. Trainsandotherthings (talk) 21:36, 17 June 2024 (UTC)[reply]
Trainsandotherthings, I didn't mean to imply that it was. If I did, I apologize. Communication is sometimes quite challenging SusunW (talk) 21:41, 17 June 2024 (UTC)[reply]
Generally I think we should try to be more positive about all contributors here. Perhaps we should celebrate reviewers more (COI alert: I tend to review more than I write) instead of looking down at non-reviewers (although it is a very human thing to do). I like reviewing SusunW's biographies (and I really enjoy working with her) so I am sad there have been so few of them here recently.
I am very interested in seeing whether the review circles idea can work as a (completely voluntary) way where people who are OK with doing some reviewing get their own nomination reviewed faster. If this becomes popular, people will have a choice: do a review to get your own nom reviewed very soon/put your nom on the pile with no questions asked about reviewing (and that means you may have to wait until the next backlog drive). —Kusma (talk) 09:32, 18 June 2024 (UTC)[reply]
Thank you Kusma I enjoy working with you too a lot. I am going to rip a bandaid off here and be vulnerable for a minute, but maybe it will help some people understand that reviewing is not simple for everyone. When I review I file, I tell myself, this time I am just going to read it, make comments, do a spot check and move on. But that never happens, ever. I read through the article. I start a 2nd read through and when I get to the first citation, I check it. I tell myself at the second citation to just accept it, but my brain says, what if it doesn't verify the information or has a copyvio? You have to sign-off that it's okay, so I check it. And this continues through every single citation. If I find an inconsistency, instead of just asking the question do you have a source that supports this?, I must know if there is a source. Or, I encounter something that the context is unclear. If a source is off-line do I AGF? Totally depends on whether other checks have had no problems. So I research (sometimes for hours) to find a reference that supports the data, provides context, or is accessible. Only if I cannot find a source do I just ask the question.
By this time, an entire day has passed and I am probably only 1/3 to 1/2 way through the article, so I post what I have from my notes to WP. I rewrite each query to make sure that what I am asking is clear and a suggestion, not a demand. I preview it and rewrite it again before I finally save it and move on. Day 2 and Day 3 are more of the same until I finally reach the end of the article, drained and exhausted. I hope that the nominator will take at least a day to respond to give me time to regroup. I review the responses as meticulously as I did the queries and finally make a decision on the outcome. Instead of feeling successful, my feeling is relief that it's over. And then I see a post on this page, admonishing people about not doing enough reviews and I force myself to do it again. The struggle is real, and it is hard. Howie Mandel once said I know my approach is not logical, but in spite of that I am compelled to do the illogical. That's me. We cannot assume we know why people don't do reviews, but we can change our approach to one which encourages people to do what they can. (And yes, I rewrote this 5 times.) SusunW (talk) 16:04, 18 June 2024 (UTC)[reply]
Thanks for taking the time to write this out Susun. The work you have done over the years to improve articles on here has been amazing and very inspiring, it has always been a pleasure to read what you have written and to work with you not only on reviews but other projects too. It's heartbreaking to hear you have been so discouraged by these periodic discussions on reviews, and I apologise profusely if I have contributed to that discouragement. Discouraging others from doing such good work should never be what we aim to accomplish here, and it is not a good sign if we are going in that direction. I agree completely that we need to reevaluate how to encourage more reviews without discouraging nominations, and to be more holistically positive towards each other. --Grnrchst (talk) 19:40, 18 June 2024 (UTC)[reply]
So—to be direct—you find GA reviewing difficult because you don't actually do GA reviews. ~~ AirshipJungleman29 (talk) 20:15, 18 June 2024 (UTC)[reply]
Grnrchst we're all good. I honestly just wanted to offer a different perspective to remind everyone that we don't all have the same access and abilities. The internet has been a great bridge but its anonymous nature can also make us forget that there is a real human on the other side. I don't often speak of my struggles, but perhaps it can help us be more "holistically positive towards each other". AirshipJungleman29 I am uncertain what you are saying, I do and have done GA reviews. SusunW (talk) 20:26, 18 June 2024 (UTC)[reply]
My two centimes: Since my foray into good article nominations, I have tried to maintain at least 2 reviews for each nomination. Not only do I enjoy reviewing articles, because it gives me a way to read in-depth on subjects that I normally wouldn't have spent more time on, but I also try to be a net contributor to cutting down the backlog. My frustrations with the ever-growing backlog has, at least in part, come from a selfishness on my part.
Off the top of my head, there are at least a couple dozen or so articles that I have written to (I think) a GA standard, but which I haven't nominated due to the length of time it takes for nominations to get reviewed. Often I'll end up finishing an article, having polished off its prose and gone through every source I have in a number of languages, but then I just don't end up nominating it because I already had a number of months-old pending nominations that I was anxious to get reviewed. I think the only time I have exceeded five open nominations is during the ongoing WiG edit-a-thon.
I seriously regret that I have let my frustration at this process bubble over into support for certain restrictions, so I can't rightly support TBUA's proposal, despite understanding where he's coming from. The reason I want the backlog to be reduced is so that we can get more articles nominated, not restrict incoming nominations and punish some of our best writers. I would like applaud GMH Melbourne's recent review circles initiative, which I think could be an excellent way forward with encouraging more reviews. Let's consider making more positive projects like this, rather than imposing negative restrictions. --Grnrchst (talk) 20:12, 18 June 2024 (UTC)[reply]

GAN page not updating

It appears ChristieBot is getting partway through its run and then crashing before it can update the GAN page. I suspect I know what the problem is but I can't do anything about it till I get home this evening about eight hours from now, so GAN is not going to update until at least then. Mike Christie (talk - contribs - library) 13:22, 18 June 2024 (UTC)[reply]

The problem with bots like this is that they often have a bus factor of one. Thebiguglyalien (talk) 13:46, 18 June 2024 (UTC)[reply]
Eight hours of decreasing backlog though. CMD (talk) 13:55, 18 June 2024 (UTC)[reply]
Should be fixed now, and I think I've fixed the underlying issue that caused it as well. Mike Christie (talk - contribs - library) 23:55, 18 June 2024 (UTC)[reply]

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