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==Initial phase==
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This is only a draft and I realize it has my opinions dripping all over it so don't be shy and discuss here. We are basically trying to answer the question: "What is notable enough to be included on a recent year page and what is not?" [[User:Wrad|Wrad]] ([[User talk:Wrad|talk]]) 20:46, 5 January 2009 (UTC)
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:Could we name [[Eurovision Song Contest]] as something that should not be linked, as well. If that was in the guideline, I'd withdraw my opposition to the removal of the [[Superbowl]]. — [[User:Arthur Rubin|Arthur Rubin]] [[User talk:Arthur Rubin|(talk)]] 22:42, 5 January 2009 (UTC)
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::Definitely. [[User:Wrad|Wrad]] ([[User talk:Wrad|talk]]) 22:45, 5 January 2009 (UTC)
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== RFC: International notability - All sections ==
:: I also agree that that The [[Eurovision Song Contest|Eurovision]] should not be listed, it is a regular showbiz event.
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:: A lot of events used to be listed, and once we have proper guidelines in place we can go back through the years and remove what should not be included. [[User:FFMG|FFMG]] ([[User talk:FFMG|talk]]) 06:54, 6 January 2009 (UTC)
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I know there is another RFC still open but it does not seem to be going anywhere meaningful. I propose to replace the section "Inclusion and exclusion criteria" with the following:


*"Recent years pages are intended to provide an overview of events of ''international'' and ''lasting'' notability that occur during that year:
I'm pretty much in agreement with the guidelines as listed. In general an entry which fits into one of the sub-categories must be pretty exceptional to be included on a year page. Obviously it must also be internationally significant as well. At present there are probably 2 missing sub-categories which should be added: Disasters and Terrorist Attacks. The note under 3-Continent Rule "Events which are not cited will be removed" might need the addition "unless it has it's own wiki article".
*In general, events meeting this criterion should recieve significant independent news reporting from at least three continents or should recieve coverage by multiple reliable sources as one of the most significant global events to have occured during that year. (For example in a year in review article in a major newspaper).
*Births or Deaths which recieve significant independent news reporting from three continents or recieve coverage by multiple reliable sources as one of the most important global events to have occured during that year are included in this criterion.
*Some categories of reccuring events often recieve significant international coverage but are still not usually of ''lasting'' notability. We have special additional rules to deal with these categories. If such events recieve coverage by multiple reliable sources as one of the most significant global events to have occured during that year this may be evidence that they are of unusual importance and should be included.


Then, we would retain the other sub-sections - with the exception of the three continent rule, births and deaths which would be subsumed above.
The only other quibble I have is with the Deaths criteria. I don't see how this can be applied as successfully to less recent years (I realise we're only talking about current/recent pages here). Also some links will go dead after a while which could become problematic later on for marginal cases. Another difficulty is wether or not a non-english article is merely an auto-translation for a mirror news site rather than an independent report, the latter being a much better indication of notability than the former. Unfortunately I can think of no other all-encompassing criteria that could be used so I guess we're stuck with it.


I think that this change would improve the balance of recent years articles. Dramatically reduce squabbling over dumb things and give a more balanced overall picture. There might be a lag with a few things until reliable sources start to round up a year but I think that is emmiently preferable to the current arbitrary standards which manage to be both too flexible (to allow random dead musicians and athletes who happen to be [[WP:BIAS]] beneficiaries) and too inflexible (not allowing election of Donald Trump on [[2016]] even though we can now clearly see it was one of the most significant events of the year.)
Another thing which might save a lot of repetition would be a link at the top of the year page to this guideline page; I'm pretty sure we're all tired of having to revert the same good-faith edits over and over again! Cheers, [[User:DerbyCountyinNZ|DerbyCountyinNZ]] ([[User talk:DerbyCountyinNZ|talk]]) 01:01, 6 January 2009 (UTC)
:::Since wikipedia can't use itself as a source, I don't think "unless it has its own wiki article" is a good idea. If it has its own wiki article, then we can take a source from that article and put it on the event, that's fine. [[User:Wrad|Wrad]] ([[User talk:Wrad|talk]]) 04:04, 6 January 2009 (UTC)


I am not a wiki policy wonk and I am sure there are some flaws in what i have put above, but we can correct small things later. I hope this would be a positive change that would fix a lot of the big issues we nearly all seem to acknowledge. [[User:AlasdairEdits|AlasdairEdits]] ([[User talk:AlasdairEdits|talk]]) 19:09, 15 September 2017 (UTC)
:: In my limited experience on year pages, most people don't even read hidden comments, let alone go and read guidelines.
*'''Oppose''' your proposal just gives more latitude to hidden rules and subversive "we don't do that" approaches, because something like "... significant independent news reporting ..." needs objective criteria to assess against. We need something concrete that can't be over-ruled by regulars who claim some kind of provenance, e.g. "the death is reported in at least two reliable sources in at least two continents". As for events, similar applies. [[User:The Rambling Man|The Rambling Man]] ([[User talk:The Rambling Man|talk]]) 19:14, 15 September 2017 (UTC)
:: But it would be nice if we could remove an entry and simply add 'removed per #3.4 of the guildlines', (or something to that effect). [[User:FFMG|FFMG]] ([[User talk:FFMG|talk]]) 06:54, 6 January 2009 (UTC)
*:PS, the other RFC is perfectly meaningful, it's enabling a much wider audience to comment on the current situation and therefore hopefully bringing more views to the next phase: '''the solution'''. [[User:The Rambling Man|The Rambling Man]] ([[User talk:The Rambling Man|talk]]) 19:15, 15 September 2017 (UTC)
*:: I think editors understand words like significant, independent and reliable - these are concepts that are enshrined within wikipedia that we have to deal with every day, they are not totally objective of course but they are also not at all arbitrary. This is my attempt at a solution. I am trying to strike a balance between now and "just an article of links to other X in RY articles" neither of which serve our readers. [[User:AlasdairEdits|AlasdairEdits]] ([[User talk:AlasdairEdits|talk]]) 19:24, 15 September 2017 (UTC)
*:::I know what you're ''trying'' to do, it fails, but it's good to make a effort. My approach was to gather together as many interested individuals as possible and then get a brainstorm on how to fix it all up. To each their own. [[User:The Rambling Man|The Rambling Man]] ([[User talk:The Rambling Man|talk]]) 19:31, 15 September 2017 (UTC)
*'''Support'''. This resembles one of my suggestioms above. It would be constructive even if the other active RfC were constructive. (NOTE: I'm not saying the other RfC was not intended to be constructive, just that it could not be constructive.) I think "significant" coverage is good phrasing. — [[User:Arthur Rubin|Arthur Rubin]] [[User talk:Arthur Rubin|(talk)]] 03:34, 16 September 2017 (UTC)
*Ironic, isn't it, that the ''other RFC'' is getting ''so much'' discussion and support in favour of finding an alternative solution. It's done ''exactly'' what it intended to do, i.e. get many more eyes on the problem rather than just the regulars who keep [[WP:SQS|stonewalling]]. This "one-size-fits-all" suggestion is well-intended, but not adequate. We need to work with the community to come up with more precisely and objectively defined criteria, not the current bizarre carnival of oddities that currently consitutes the essay for inclusion. [[User:The Rambling Man|The Rambling Man]] ([[User talk:The Rambling Man|talk]]) 06:39, 16 September 2017 (UTC)
{{hat|That's enough, guys [[User:Ritchie333|<b style="color:#7F007F">Ritchie333</b>]] [[User talk:Ritchie333|<sup style="color:#7F007F">(talk)</sup>]] [[Special:Contributions/Ritchie333|<sup style="color:#7F007F">(cont)</sup>]] 11:21, 19 September 2017 (UTC) }}
*:This ''is'' a proposed alternative solution. Why are you opposed to any proposed solutions? — [[User:Arthur Rubin|Arthur Rubin]] [[User talk:Arthur Rubin|(talk)]] 08:01, 16 September 2017 (UTC)
*::I'm not opposed to "any" proposed solution, that's a lie. I'm opposed to ''this'' proposal. Please don't make false assertions ''yet again''. [[User:The Rambling Man|The Rambling Man]] ([[User talk:The Rambling Man|talk]]) 08:11, 16 September 2017 (UTC)
*:::You have opposed all proposed solutions or specific changes (and most insufficiently specfic changes) which have been presented other than by yourself. — [[User:Arthur Rubin|Arthur Rubin]] [[User talk:Arthur Rubin|(talk)]] 15:20, 16 September 2017 (UTC)
*::::Arthur, are we going to have to bring this up at Arbcom? Diffs that prove I have "opposed all proposed solutions or specific changes " right now or a redaction and retraction of your accusation is needed. [[User:The Rambling Man|The Rambling Man]] ([[User talk:The Rambling Man|talk]]) 18:33, 16 September 2017 (UTC)
*:::::It's <strike>impossible</strike> <ins>very difficult</ins> to prove a negative. However, if there '''is''' a specific proposal at [[WT:RY]], other than those you proposed, which you did '''not''' oppose, and you can provide a diff, I'll admit my error. I can provide many diffs where you opposed proposals, but it wouldn't prove '''anything'''. — [[User:Arthur Rubin|Arthur Rubin]] [[User talk:Arthur Rubin|(talk)]] 04:34, 17 September 2017 (UTC)
*:::::It ''would'' be impossible to demonstrate in the space available. I would have to list each formal proposal (and I could not ''prove'' I caught all of them), and point to one of your diffs opposing each one. If you believe the statement to be false, you could easily point to a specific proposal which you did not oppose; it would be easy enough for me to verify you didn't oppose the proposal, although I obviously couldn't provide proof.
*:::::Before you bring up the proposal to eliminate the #Deaths sections from RY articles, you made the proposal before it was formally asked as a question requesting response, so it doesn't count as a proposal you didn't make. — [[User:Arthur Rubin|Arthur Rubin]] [[User talk:Arthur Rubin|(talk)]] 05:08, 17 September 2017 (UTC)
*::::::Rubin, you don't have many options here, either provide diffs that support your unsubstantiated claim or remove the claim. You're already about to be desyssoped for making false and unsubstantiated claims, continued abuse like this will result in you being blocked. I'm sure you don't want that. [[User:The Rambling Man|The Rambling Man]] ([[User talk:The Rambling Man|talk]]) 07:29, 17 September 2017 (UTC)
*::::::{{U|Arthur Rubin}} I'm still waiting for those diffs. The onus is absolutely 100% on you to prove your assertion. You know that, or at least you should know that as you are currently still an admin and that kind of thing is like Admin 101. You can't just level an unfounded accusation at someone and then state they need to defend it. I'm sure you don't want to be blocked, but continuing to edit like this will ultimately result in you being banned from Wikipedia. If you don't redact your latest unfounded accusations, I'll ask Arbcom to add it to the ongoing case as further evidence that not only can you not be trusted with the admin tools, but you can't be trusted here at all. [[User:The Rambling Man|The Rambling Man]] ([[User talk:The Rambling Man|talk]]) 20:56, 18 September 2017 (UTC)
*:::::::Obviously, I can provide diffs that you have opposed many proposals; but diffs are not necessary &ndash; the presence of your "Oppose" !vote is sufficient evidence. Diffs would be insufficient to prove my statement, as I might have missed a proposal. The onus is on you to point to a proposal, which was not originally made by you, which you failed to oppose. — [[User:Arthur Rubin|Arthur Rubin]] [[User talk:Arthur Rubin|(talk)]] 22:54, 18 September 2017 (UTC)
*::::::::Please stop making unfounded accusations about me. I won't ask again, I will simply report you to Arbcom for each and every single infraction where you make an accusation and then refuse to back it up without any evidence whatsoever. The presence of my oppose vote here does not equate to your claim that I am "opposed to any proposed solutions". That is a pure lie and you need to redact it. [[User:The Rambling Man|The Rambling Man]] ([[User talk:The Rambling Man|talk]]) 06:41, 19 September 2017 (UTC)
{{hab}}


How about deaths of (former) heads of state/government? Many of them aren't widely reported by the media. [[User:Jim Michael|Jim Michael]] ([[User talk:Jim Michael|talk]]) 22:11, 16 September 2017 (UTC)
A new link to these guidelines is now added to the 2009 page. Hopefully more people will read the guidelines after this.
:Deaths of individual of international and lasting significance like [[Nelson Mandela]] or [[Fidel Castro]] they are. minor heads of state of random small nations not so much. I don't propose to keep any special categories for ''inclusion''[[User:AlasdairEdits|AlasdairEdits]] ([[User talk:AlasdairEdits|talk]]) 06:30, 17 September 2017 (UTC)
::Where would you draw the line in regard to heads of state/government? [[User:Jim Michael|Jim Michael]] ([[User talk:Jim Michael|talk]]) 18:52, 17 September 2017 (UTC)
:::Just don't draw any line, to do so encourages systemic bias. [[User:The Rambling Man|The Rambling Man]] ([[User talk:The Rambling Man|talk]]) 19:23, 17 September 2017 (UTC)
::::How would we decide which (former) heads of state should be included and which should not? The guide of including all of them made sense - a leader of a nation is by definition of significant international notability. To include some but not others will be deemed as bias towards some parts of the world and bias against others. [[User:Jim Michael|Jim Michael]] ([[User talk:Jim Michael|talk]]) 19:41, 17 September 2017 (UTC)
:::::Include them all. ITNR has a good stab at this. Then there is no bias, simply reporting everyone. It's very simple. [[User:The Rambling Man|The Rambling Man]] ([[User talk:The Rambling Man|talk]]) 20:15, 17 September 2017 (UTC)
::::::ITN doesn't include all or nearly all of them. We have been including them all on RY articles for years - so we agree on the matter of including all (former) heads of state/government. [[User:Jim Michael|Jim Michael]] ([[User talk:Jim Michael|talk]]) 22:53, 17 September 2017 (UTC)
:::::::Only because ITN insists on a minimum quality threshold and no BLP violations, unlike this project. [[User:The Rambling Man|The Rambling Man]] ([[User talk:The Rambling Man|talk]]) 05:54, 18 September 2017 (UTC)
::::::::Putting dead people under BLP rules is factually wrong. Excluding internationally notable people from Year articles - just because their articles don't meet a particular standard - would mean that some of the most notable people would be missing. That doesn't help anyone. [[User:Jim Michael|Jim Michael]] ([[User talk:Jim Michael|talk]]) 13:20, 18 September 2017 (UTC)
:::::::::I think you may need to read [[WP:BLP]] Jim. You are '''factually wrong''' (again). And many individuals ''are'' missing from your cherry-picked list. That doesn't help anyone. [[User:The Rambling Man|The Rambling Man]] ([[User talk:The Rambling Man|talk]]) 13:23, 18 September 2017 (UTC)
::::::::::It's not my personal list - it was formed by following RY criteria which had been written by the regulars over a period of years.<br>I'm not aware of any internationally notable people who died this year who are missing from [[2017]]. [[User:Jim Michael|Jim Michael]] ([[User talk:Jim Michael|talk]]) 18:04, 18 September 2017 (UTC)
:::::::::::So redact your BLP violations, and of course '''you're not aware''' of any missing people because you have your own version of "internationally notable" which is not commensurate with the community. [[User:The Rambling Man|The Rambling Man]] ([[User talk:The Rambling Man|talk]]) 18:18, 18 September 2017 (UTC)
::::::::::::What BLP vios? I'm not responsible for vios of any kind which were added by other people to articles which I've linked to - whether on RY articles or elsewhere. As far as I'm aware, all of the people who have significant international notability and died this year are currently in this article. [[User:Jim Michael|Jim Michael]] ([[User talk:Jim Michael|talk]]) 23:25, 18 September 2017 (UTC)
:::::::::::::The statements you yourself have made. [[User:The Rambling Man|The Rambling Man]] ([[User talk:The Rambling Man|talk]]) 06:38, 19 September 2017 (UTC)
*'''Generally support'''. I think this proposal takes the best of the current policy while removing the worst of it. The key point is that the proposal frames international notability in terms of the ''coverage'' of the event as opposed to the event itself. An event can be "domestic" in nature while still being internationally notable, and I think that a number of those have gotten lost previously. I do still think it needs some fine-tuning. The biggest hole I see in the "three continent" rule is that it automatically creates a systemic bias because Australia is its own continent and is culturally similar to the US/Canada (North America) and the UK (Europe). I don't want to make a kind of rule where Australia doesn't "count," but I'm not sure how else to resolve the issue. [[User talk:Agtx|<span style="color:#8B008B">'''agt'''</span><span style="color:#000000">x</span>]] 15:30, 19 September 2017 (UTC)
::That's why the three-continent rule wasn't enough by itself to demonstrate international notability. It was merely one of the requirements. [[User:Jim Michael|Jim Michael]] ([[User talk:Jim Michael|talk]]) 19:13, 19 September 2017 (UTC)
:::Right, a requirement that the regulars on these pages invoked when it was something they wanted to have on the page and pooh-poohed when it wasn't. Consider such absurd discussions as [[Talk:2015/Archive 1#Charlie Hebdo shooting|this one on the Charlie Hebdo shooting]] and [[Talk:2015/Archive 1#US Same-sex marriage decision|this one on the US same-sex marriage decision]]. Under the proposal above, both of these events would be listed in the article (as I think is proper, and as Charlie Hebdo eventually was). I agree that there is no need for a bright-line rule here, but I think that reference to coverage in reliable sources is ''way'' better than discussions about "international impact" without citation to any sources. [[User talk:Agtx|<span style="color:#8B008B">'''agt'''</span><span style="color:#000000">x</span>]] 15:27, 20 September 2017 (UTC)
*'''Comment''' – This is a really good start. The biggest problem we currently have is determining what is and what is not "internationally significant". I don't think this proposal adequately addresses that problem, but it is better than our current system. I particularly like the addition regarding reliable sources assessing events as the most significant events of the year, although that does have the potential to create a system where the page is relatively bare for most of the year with a flurry of additions at the end of the year/beginning of the following year. I don't like the emphasis on the coverage of deaths; I think the emphasis should be on the person, not their death. Someone's death could go relatively unnoticed when their life was very significant. But I don't think the converse is true: if someone's death does receive the requisite coverage, then that does some indicative of significance. -- [[User:Irn|Irn]] ([[User talk:Irn|talk]]) 00:15, 20 September 2017 (UTC)
::Yes - someone can have a long, successful career but their death still receives little attention. That's the case with most of the important scientists (because most people aren't interested in them) and with many sportspeople who retired many years before their deaths and vanished from the public eye. It can even be the case with entertainers - for example, [[Lauren Bacall]]'s death received little media coverage. However, it's not true to say that a high-profile death proves (s)he had an internationally (or even nationally) important career. A death can receive a large amount of coverage due to there being legal action, campaigning etc. involved (such as [[Terri Schiavo]] and [[Charlie Gard]]) - or due having been the victim of a high-profile murder (such as [[Rachel Nickell]]). [[User:Jim Michael|Jim Michael]] ([[User talk:Jim Michael|talk]]) 14:06, 20 September 2017 (UTC)
:::You're right, and I agree with everything you wrote in that comment. I apologize for the apparent contradiction in my comment as a result of not expressing myself clearly. While I think the focus should be on the person's life, I also think that people whose deaths were notable internationally ought to be considered as well. (Neither Rachel Nickell, Terri Schiavo, nor Charlie Gard has their own article, so those aren't the best examples. I was thinking someone more along the lines of [[Berta Cáceres]].) I expect you to still disagree with that, and I don't hope to convince you otherwise. I just wanted to make sure I was expressing myself clearly. -- [[User:Irn|Irn]] ([[User talk:Irn|talk]]) 18:41, 20 September 2017 (UTC)
::::Caceres was little-known outside her country during her lifetime. The circumstances of her death is the main thing that brought media coverage of her. This often happens with victims of murder who were of fairly low notability during their lifetimes, such as [[Sharon Tate]] and [[Rebecca Schaeffer]]. [[User:Jim Michael|Jim Michael]] ([[User talk:Jim Michael|talk]]) 21:00, 20 September 2017 (UTC)
:::::Right. If those deaths received the requisite coverage, then that would seem indicative of significance to me, but not to you. Like I said, I expect you to disagree with me, and I don't hope to convince you otherwise. -- [[User:Irn|Irn]] ([[User talk:Irn|talk]]) 01:11, 21 September 2017 (UTC)
*'''Comment''' Couldn't we find one or more reliable, international sources which provide annual reviews including obituaries, where they have already identified notability, and use these sources as the determiner? Example: say the BBC, Guardian, New York Times, Reuters, and Sky have such articles, if individual X appears in 3 of those 5, they are deemed internationally notable? [[Special:Contributions/62.255.118.6|62.255.118.6]] ([[User talk:62.255.118.6|talk]]) 15:28, 21 September 2017 (UTC)
**Yes! That's what I've been mentioning for months now. Except perhaps a non-Western one or two would be useful to avoid bias and the problem is that we can't use them for the current year. But a good idea about the subsetting, if the requirement that the individual notice to appear in all of them proves to be too harsh. — [[User:Yerpo|Yerpo]] <sup>[[User talk:Yerpo|Eh?]]</sup> 16:52, 21 September 2017 (UTC)
:::Sure; if we are seeking to define international notability it would be good to include a non-western source in the list of annual review publications. But essentially, if the source is international, then their selection by default would be international too. I think it's good to be inclusive but it's also worth remembering that this is the English Wikipedia, at to some extent it is to be expected to carry some bias towards the nationality of its audience and editors, according to what sources we can find, translate and understand. [[Special:Contributions/62.255.118.6|62.255.118.6]] ([[User talk:62.255.118.6|talk]]) 10:44, 22 September 2017 (UTC)
*'''Oppose''' the solution for the events. Sorry, but the key requirement is too vague - what is "lasting" notability and how do you prove it if editors disagree? For this reason, I think that this proposal is not a significant improvement over the existing system. — [[User:Yerpo|Yerpo]] <sup>[[User talk:Yerpo|Eh?]]</sup> 18:12, 21 September 2017 (UTC)
*'''Oppose''' This is far too woolly, and I'm more in favour of what has been discussed a few comments up with Yerpo - using annual review articles from reliable international sources to establish evidence of international notability; i.e. if the individual is notable enough to be included in 1/2/3/4/5 other annual review articles (from the BBC, Guardian, New York Times or whichever publications are decided to be internationally representative), then they are good enough to be included here. Simple, logical and nonsubjective. [[Special:Contributions/62.255.118.6|62.255.118.6]] ([[User talk:62.255.118.6|talk]]) 10:52, 22 September 2017 (UTC)
::What do we do during the current year? [[User talk:Agtx|<span style="color:#8B008B">'''agt'''</span><span style="color:#000000">x</span>]] 13:10, 22 September 2017 (UTC)
:::We can use one of the other options, such as three-continent obituaries, then cleanup after the lists are published. — [[User:Yerpo|Yerpo]] <sup>[[User talk:Yerpo|Eh?]]</sup> 20:01, 22 September 2017 (UTC)
::::Assume you mean news articles rather than obits (since we're talking about events). I think the "year in review" type pieces should be considered a preferred source for RY articles. That's a reliable source saying "here's the most important things that happened this year," which is exactly what we're looking for. I'm not convinced it should be a ''requirement'', but it's a good indication that something should be on the page. [[User talk:Agtx|<span style="color:#8B008B">'''agt'''</span><span style="color:#000000">x</span>]] 21:39, 22 September 2017 (UTC)
:::::Support proposal by {{u|agtx}}: follow RS to compile the most influential events of each year. We could break it down by categories, using a couple sources for science, a couple others for politics, some more for entertainment, etc. — [[User:JFG|JFG]] <sup>[[User talk:JFG|talk]]</sup> 02:43, 23 September 2017 (UTC)
:::::Actually, I was talking about obituaries for compiling the deaths section. As for events, we could use the same approach, of course, but I'm not sure yet what to do in the current year, because the three continent rule hasn't proven to be an effective filter. — [[User:Yerpo|Yerpo]] <sup>[[User talk:Yerpo|Eh?]]</sup> 05:18, 23 September 2017 (UTC)
::::::Do we have to have anything for current year? Yerpo, earlier you were championing the inclusion of cherry-picked deaths in RY articles "because its what others do". Well, if others DON'T do current year annual reviews until the end of the year, why don't we follow suit? That leaves the current year either blank, or a set of links to all encyclopaedic-worthy deaths/events. We then correlate that list, 'cherry pick' according to criteria (ie. presence in alternative obit/annual review articles) and produce our own finished annual review article just as everyone else does. Without needing weird rules fraudulently promoted to guideline status by those currently lacking credibility. [[Special:Contributions/62.255.118.6|62.255.118.6]] ([[User talk:62.255.118.6|talk]]) 12:15, 3 October 2017 (UTC)
:::::::We do need a list of deaths on 2017, because many people view it each day. Many organisations have lists of notable people who've died this year so far. [[User:Jim Michael|Jim Michael]] ([[User talk:Jim Michael|talk]]) 01:29, 4 October 2017 (UTC)
:::::::: '''''many people view it each day''''' - Links please. '''''Many organisations have lists of notable people who've died this year so far.''''' - Links please. [[Special:Contributions/62.255.118.6|62.255.118.6]] ([[User talk:62.255.118.6|talk]]) 12:54, 4 October 2017 (UTC)
::::::::{{Reply to|Jim Michael}} - Jim: '''''many people view it each day''''' - Links please. '''''Many organisations have lists of notable people who've died this year so far.''''' - Links please. You've been editing so you are aware of my request. If you don't have the evidence to back up your claims, no problem - simply strike them from the record. [[Special:Contributions/62.255.118.6|62.255.118.6]] ([[User talk:62.255.118.6|talk]]) 10:14, 6 October 2017 (UTC)
:::::::::Go to [[WP:Pageview statistics]], where you can search whichever timeframe you like, which will show you that this article receives thousands of views per day. Examples of RS which have published lists of deaths so far this year include the [[Daily Express]] [http://www.express.co.uk/news/world/752455/People-who-died-in-2017-celebrities-famous-people-stars-list-of-deaths-this-year People who died in 2017] and [[CNN]] [http://edition.cnn.com/2017/01/16/world/gallery/people-we-lost-in-2017/index.html People we've lost in 2017]. [[User:Jim Michael|Jim Michael]] ([[User talk:Jim Michael|talk]]) 10:43, 6 October 2017 (UTC)
::::::::::Well that's great news, if we can find Reliable Sources such as these which cherry-pick in real time rather than end of year, the objection to the Annual Review/obit Reliable Source method in terms of making Current Year articles untenable, is completely overturned, wouldn't you agree? [[Special:Contributions/62.255.118.6|62.255.118.6]] ([[User talk:62.255.118.6|talk]]) 13:35, 6 October 2017 (UTC)
:::::::::::The problem is which sources to use. Even if we exclude tabloid sources, they will still be entertainer-centric, Americentric etc. [[User:Jim Michael|Jim Michael]] ([[User talk:Jim Michael|talk]]) 01:24, 7 October 2017 (UTC)
::::::::::::Come on man, work with me here. For one, you can't just dismiss every RS as entertainer-centric. For two, this is Wikipedia. We aren't trying to outdo every other information source out there. If its good enough for Time magazine, or Forbes, or Reuters, or The Guardian, or the BBC, or Al Jazera, or Sky, or the New York Times etc etc. For three, a list slightly biased though its aggregation of a set of proffesional, international media group obits/annual reviews, is far far far far far superior to what you are fighting so desperately to uphold - a list biased by you and a weird, proves-nothing, principle breaching 9Wiki rule. You want to stick with something because its the best option available? Then let go of the 9wiki, cos best it certainly isn't. [[Special:Contributions/62.255.118.6|62.255.118.6]] ([[User talk:62.255.118.6|talk]]) 12:54, 12 October 2017 (UTC)
'''Oppose''' for several of the above reasons. This page is not a guideline, so it shouldn't be trying to make "rules" any longer anyway. There's a germ of truth in the proposal, and a compressed version of it would probably be useful as broad advice. Take the tactic used by subject-specific notability guidelines, and address this a probability matter: "An addition to a year article is more likely to be accepted by consensus, if it has one or more of the following going for it: [bullet list here]". <span style="white-space:nowrap;font-family:'Trebuchet MS'"> — [[User:SMcCandlish|'''SMcCandlish''']] [[User talk:SMcCandlish|☏]] [[Special:Contributions/SMcCandlish|¢]] &gt;<sup>ʌ</sup>ⱷ҅<sub>ᴥ</sub>ⱷ<sup>ʌ</sup>&lt; </span> 06:10, 16 October 2017 (UTC)
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: ''The discussion above is closed. <b style="color: #FF0000;">Please do not modify it.</b> Subsequent comments should be made on the appropriate discussion page. No further edits should be made to this discussion.''<!-- from [[Template:Archive bottom]] --></div><div style="clear:both;"></div>


== RFC: Do we need to differentiate between "recent years" and other years? ==
Then a thought, perhaps some of these rules are to apply more strict for events of the past than for upcoming? After all, only few events are noticed in media until they actually occur, even if it is known where and when they will happen. I guess this is already the case, but maybe this can be specified more clearly among the rules. <small><span class="autosigned">—Preceding [[Wikipedia:Signatures|unsigned]] comment added by [[User:RBM 72|RBM 72]] ([[User talk:RBM 72|talk]] • [[Special:Contributions/RBM 72|contribs]]) 20:44, 26 January 2009 (UTC)</span></small><!-- Template:Unsigned --> <!--Autosigned by SineBot-->
{{Archive top|1=Most people seem to think "no," but to be clear, while discussion on Wikiprojects can suggest various criteria for formatting/inclusion of content via essays, none of these are [[WP:LOP|policies]], [[WP:LGL|guidelines]], or even [[WP:MOS|manual of style]] entries and therefore don't reflect community-wide consensus. --[[User:Slakr|<span style="color:teal;font-weight:bold;">slakr</span>]]<small><sup>\&nbsp;[[User talk:Slakr|talk]]&nbsp;/</sup></small> 17:39, 27 December 2017 (UTC)}}


The [[WP:RY]] "sub-project" (of [[WP:YEARS]]) mandates a unique set of inclusion criteria for years [[2002]] onwards. These criteria are not applied to years prior to 2002. Do we need to apply different inclusion criteria to year articles? Does our [[WP:READER|readership]] understand the reason for such differences in articles between [[2001]] and [[2002]]? Or should our readers expect consistent formats across all year articles? [[User:The Rambling Man|The Rambling Man]] ([[User talk:The Rambling Man|talk]]) 20:24, 15 October 2017 (UTC)
There is mention in the guideline of certain topical year articles like spaceflight. It seems like the country-based alternative should be mentioned as well, with some links, such as to the [[2009 in the United States|US]] and [[2009 in the European Union|EU]] articles at least.
* Is there an actual problem to address? I get the feeling that we don't bother with stricter inclusion criteria on older year articles due to reduced tendency to add trivia to them. <del>I'm not sure why 2002 in particular was picked. Is it just a 15-year boundary that migrates as time goes on, or set permanently at 2002?</del> <small>(Never mind; discussions above answer this.)</small> <span style="white-space:nowrap;font-family:'Trebuchet MS'"> — [[User:SMcCandlish|'''SMcCandlish''']] [[User talk:SMcCandlish|☏]] [[Special:Contributions/SMcCandlish|¢]] &gt;<sup>ʌ</sup>ⱷ҅<sub>ᴥ</sub>ⱷ<sup>ʌ</sup>&lt; </span> 05:40, 16 October 2017 (UTC), rev'd. 05:47, 16 October 2017 (UTC)<p>I support the notion in a thread above to set the mark at 20 years (approx. 1 generation), which as JFG says is generally time enough for something to have transitioned from news to history and thus for its lasting importance to be more certain. However, this page is not a guideline, so anything it says should be framed as general advice, about the kind of list addition that is likely or not likely to be accepted. We can't actually impose any rule here. <span style="white-space:nowrap;font-family:'Trebuchet MS'"> — [[User:SMcCandlish|'''SMcCandlish''']] [[User talk:SMcCandlish|☏]] [[Special:Contributions/SMcCandlish|¢]] &gt;<sup>ʌ</sup>ⱷ҅<sub>ᴥ</sub>ⱷ<sup>ʌ</sup>&lt; </span> 06:16, 16 October 2017 (UTC)</p>
*:Yes, as noted, why should our readers inherently understand that articles from 2001 backward have different inclusion criteria from 2002 onward? How does this approach ''help'' our readers? [[User:The Rambling Man|The Rambling Man]] ([[User talk:The Rambling Man|talk]]) 06:33, 16 October 2017 (UTC)
*::Discussion above indicates this date was chosen based on when WP started, and has a connection to the apparently now-rejected "seven Wikipedias rule" (which would no longer actually be a rule even if it hadn't been rejected, since this is no longer a guideline). The 2002 date is based on a string of assumptions that don't hold. It makes more sense to set this at 20 years or so, and have the boundary auto-update. Some might prefer 10 years. Regardless, this can be done with simple parser functions right in the page itself, so it auto-updates on its own. If the ultimate question is "should there be any difference between the [[2017]] and [[1980]] articles", I would say yes, for reasons JFG already outlined in two threads above, and which boil down the difference between well-analyzed history versus reactionarily-covered news. The closer in time to an event that seemingly secondary-source material about the event is, the more primary-source in nature that material really is. <span style="white-space:nowrap;font-family:'Trebuchet MS'"> — [[User:SMcCandlish|'''SMcCandlish''']] [[User talk:SMcCandlish|☏]] [[Special:Contributions/SMcCandlish|¢]] &gt;<sup>ʌ</sup>ⱷ҅<sub>ᴥ</sub>ⱷ<sup>ʌ</sup>&lt; </span> 06:42, 16 October 2017 (UTC)
*:::I'm not sure you're answering the question, why should a reader expect to see a difference between 2001 and 2002 articles? And when this "recent" window expires on an article, as the inclusion criteria no longer applies, we would expect to see a load of edits... [[User:The Rambling Man|The Rambling Man]] ([[User talk:The Rambling Man|talk]]) 06:44, 16 October 2017 (UTC)
:Part of the ambiguity appears to be rooted in an underlying assumption that has not been demonstrated. The original author and some other prominent editors appear to have believed that a RY guideline, and its admittedly arbitrary time cut-offs, are necessary to prevent the mass additions of spurious and frivolous entries into the 2002+ articles. This "assumes facts not in evidence," to use the legal phrase. The hypothesis that this <s>essay</s> <s>guideline</s> essay reduced the number of entries that had to be reverted after 2010 should be testable. I haven't seen that evidence brought forward in recent discussions here, or in the original discussions surrounding the creation of this piece. In the absence of evidence of those problems, having any time cut-off seems needlessly arbitrary. The lede could just as easily say: "Recent year articles are among the most heavily edited..." and be done with it. [[User:Eggishorn|Eggishorn]] [[User talk:Eggishorn|(talk)]] [[Special:Contributions/Eggishorn|(contrib)]] 16:38, 17 October 2017 (UTC)
::"most edited" is actually factually inaccurate... [[User:The Rambling Man|The Rambling Man]] ([[User talk:The Rambling Man|talk]]) 16:40, 17 October 2017 (UTC)
:::Would "...among the most-viewed..." be accurate? [[User:Eggishorn|Eggishorn]] [[User talk:Eggishorn|(talk)]] [[Special:Contributions/Eggishorn|(contrib)]] 16:46, 17 October 2017 (UTC)
::::No. [[User:The Rambling Man|The Rambling Man]] ([[User talk:The Rambling Man|talk]]) 16:50, 17 October 2017 (UTC)
:::::In that case, then there's no reason for the sentence to exist at all. There may not even be a reason for the essay to exist if there's no evidence of large-scale disruption and if the pages are not among the most edited or most viewed. [[User:Eggishorn|Eggishorn]] [[User talk:Eggishorn|(talk)]] [[Special:Contributions/Eggishorn|(contrib)]] 17:06, 17 October 2017 (UTC)
::::::Exactly. [[User:The Rambling Man|The Rambling Man]] ([[User talk:The Rambling Man|talk]]) 17:09, 17 October 2017 (UTC)
*'''No'''. We do not need a differentiation. It's an attempted 'fix' for a problem that doesn't exist, and just convolutes our records and confuses our readers. Bin it. [[Special:Contributions/62.255.118.6|62.255.118.6]] ([[User talk:62.255.118.6|talk]]) 11:18, 18 October 2017 (UTC)
*'''No'''. We should use the same inclusion criteria for all years, regardless of recency. Events/births/deaths of international importance as supported by reliable sources should be included. [[WP:YEARS]] is an appropriate place to centralize that effort, not this essay. The arguments I've seen to the contrary largely involve concerns about the growth of Wikipedia and of the internet, but I fail to see how that problem is unique to a handful of year pages. All this recent years business has gotten us is [[WP:OWN]] behavior and poor guidelines. [[User talk:Agtx|<span style="color:#8B008B">'''agt'''</span><span style="color:#000000">x</span>]] 05:37, 19 October 2017 (UTC)
::In that case, we would need a guideline for what is eligible for inclusion in any year article, whether it be in the distant past, the recent past, the present or the future. [[User:Jim Michael|Jim Michael]] ([[User talk:Jim Michael|talk]]) 13:26, 20 October 2017 (UTC)
:::I thought we [[WP:CCPOL|already had such guidelines]] for the entire project. What's so special about any year article, recent, ancient, or otherwise? That said, [[Wikipedia:WikiProject Years/Assessment|such standards are already in place.]] [[User:Eggishorn|Eggishorn]] [[User talk:Eggishorn|(talk)]] [[Special:Contributions/Eggishorn|(contrib)]] 14:55, 20 October 2017 (UTC)
::::We don't have guidelines for what should or should not be in Year articles, but we need them. [[User:Jim Michael|Jim Michael]] ([[User talk:Jim Michael|talk]]) 18:38, 20 October 2017 (UTC)
:::::"...but we need them," um, ''why?'' Please provide some concrete evidence that year articles, especially recent ones, have created an actual (as opposed to perceived) problem to support this necessity. [[User:Eggishorn|Eggishorn]] [[User talk:Eggishorn|(talk)]] [[Special:Contributions/Eggishorn|(contrib)]] 18:46, 20 October 2017 (UTC)
::::::The evidence is that, prior to the implementation of the RY guideline, the articles in question were flooded with insufficiently notable events and deaths. [[User:Jim Michael|Jim Michael]] ([[User talk:Jim Michael|talk]]) 15:35, 21 October 2017 (UTC){{od}}
Yeah, that's extremely unconvincing to me. The attempts to curate these pages have largely failed. The recent years articles are not particularly useful right now. [[User talk:Agtx|<span style="color:#8B008B">'''agt'''</span><span style="color:#000000">x</span>]] 02:48, 22 October 2017 (UTC)
*'''Yes''' - The growth of Wikipedia and the internet are relevant because we now have far more information compiled across Wikipedia with each passing year. I think everyone is aware of [[WP:RECENTISM]], but I don't think everyone quite sees how that affects these articles. To try to break it down, for the year 1517, we can easily list every single person we have an article for who died in that year in the 1517 article itself. For 2017, we simply can't – the article would just get too long. The same applies to events. Consequently, we need to have a different standard for the events, births, and deaths of 2017 than we do for 1517. 2002 is an arbitrarily chosen year where this line has been drawn. If we look at the amount of information available and the number of biographical articles and articles on events, it makes sense to go with somewhere near 2001 or 2002 because that coincides with the birth of Wikipedia and the explosion of the internet, because as things happen, they are added to the encyclopedia. -- [[User:Irn|irn]] ([[User talk:Irn|talk]]) 15:20, 20 October 2017 (UTC)
::<small>Edit conflict</small>This argument still pre-supposes that there is a problem with these articles being made "too long" and does not show any evidence of such a problem. To pick some examples at a random set of ten-year intervals, [[1978]] is 87,993bytes and has been viewed 7,954 times in the last 30 days, [[1988]] is 97,555bytes and has been viewed 12,943 times in the last 30 days, [[1998]] is 65,047bytes and has been viewed 15,152 times in the last 30 days while [[2008]] is 42,027bytes and has been viewed 13,267 times in the last 30 days. That sample, at least, shows that post-2002 articles are ''shorter'' and there is no relationship between length of the page and whether readers are likely to use the page. There is no evidence that the essay provides any necessary selectivity. [[User:Eggishorn|Eggishorn]] [[User talk:Eggishorn|(talk)]] [[Special:Contributions/Eggishorn|(contrib)]] 15:51, 20 October 2017 (UTC)
:::I don't think I understand your point. You ask for proof that the pages have gotten too long, but RY has effectively prevented that, so it's impossible to prove. 2008 is shorter ''because of'' RY. The problem with page length isn't about how many visits a particular article may receive, but rather about [[WP:AS|readability and technical issues like load times]]. I readily concede that 2002 is arbitrary. Perhaps a better date would be 1990 (the invention of the World Wide Web) or 1950 (roughly the onset of the digital revolution) or even something like 1920 (to cover the lifespans of most people affected by the changes noted in my previous comment). <small>(Regarding post-2002 articles being shorter than other year articles, I see that as a problem with the implementation/interpretation of RY and reason to change either the way it's written or interpreted, but I don't think that's reason to discard RY entirely.)</small> -- [[User:Irn|irn]] ([[User talk:Irn|talk]]) 16:09, 20 October 2017 (UTC)
::::2008 is (was?, may be?, should have been?) covered by the essay but is a year that pre-dates the creation of the essay. If the hypothesis that this essay is necessary to prevent issues for readers is true, it ''should'' either show evidence of such a length so as to cause those problems you mention or show evidence that large post-2010 deletions were necessary and justified by the essay to remove such problems. As shown above, the length is obviously not a problem in comparison to other year articles not covered by the policy and the edit history of the page does not show any such large efforts were undertaken to bring it in line with the essay. In other words, this sample at least does not support the hypothesis that is basal to the need for this essay and I have seen no-one providing any positive evidence for the hypothesis. In the absence of such evidence, we should consider the hypothesis unproven and the essay not needed.
::::'''tl;dr version''': We don't have any reason to believe that such readability issues exist or that the essay solves any concrete problem. [[User:Eggishorn|Eggishorn]] [[User talk:Eggishorn|(talk)]] [[Special:Contributions/Eggishorn|(contrib)]] 16:23, 20 October 2017 (UTC)
:::::So the condition of the 2008 article is what led to the creation of RY. By the end of June 2008, the 2008 article was already [https://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=2008&action=history&year=2008&month=6&tagfilter= over 90,000 bytes]. With six more months to go in the year, it was already in [[WP:TOOBIG|"probably should be divided" territory]] and clearly on a path to exceeding "almost certainly should be divided" territory, and the efforts that went into trimming it back are ultimately what led to the creation of RY (see the section above [[#Historical education: One editor's history of this project]]). -- [[User:Irn|irn]] ([[User talk:Irn|talk]]) 16:44, 20 October 2017 (UTC)
::::::Thank you for being the first to provide some version of the evidence I've been stating has been lacking throughout these multiple discussions, {{reply|Irn}}. I obviously didn't go back far enough in the edit history. That said, I don't agree that the page history shows good evidence that the article was getting too long and would have created difficulties even if allowed to grow unchecked. There are literally [[Special:LongPages|10,000 pages]] that are currently longer than 2008 at it greatest extent. Even on my 5-year-old Android phone, I have zero problems loading or reading [[Raymond Burr]] (119,842bytes). It didn't even choke on [[1944 Birthday Honours]] (500,083 bytes). Admittedly, [[List of members of the Lok Sabha 1952-2017]] at 1,113,541bytes ''does'' crash my phone's app, but that's an order of magnitude bigger than any post-2002 year article I looked at. Unless or until recent year articles start breaking the >500,000byte level, I still don't see that there's an issue justifying the essay. If we look at all the years articles between 2002 (the earliest covered by the policy) and 2009 (the latest covered for a year before the essay was created), none reached anything like that at their greatest extents:
::::::{| class="wikitable"
|-
! Year article !! Greatest extent (bytes) !! Peaked in year
|-
| [[2002]] || [https://xtools.wmflabs.org/articleinfo/en.wikipedia.org/2002 52.238] || 2006
|-
| [[2003]] || [https://xtools.wmflabs.org/articleinfo/en.wikipedia.org/2003 56,349] || 2007
|-
| [[2004]] || [https://xtools.wmflabs.org/articleinfo/en.wikipedia.org/2004 67,614] || 2007
|-
| [[2005]] || [https://xtools.wmflabs.org/articleinfo/en.wikipedia.org/2005 75,328] || 2008
|-
| [[2006]] || [https://xtools.wmflabs.org/articleinfo/en.wikipedia.org/2006 112,995] || 2009
|-
| [[2007]] || [https://xtools.wmflabs.org/articleinfo/en.wikipedia.org/2007 122,508]|| 2007
|-
| [[2008]] || [https://xtools.wmflabs.org/articleinfo/en.wikipedia.org/2008 108,851] || 2012
|-
| [[2009]] || [https://xtools.wmflabs.org/articleinfo/en.wikipedia.org/2009 78,038] || 2016
|}
::::::The more I look for concrete evidence and statistics supporting the hypothesis that this essay is necessary (rather than anecdotes or armchair theorizing), the less I find supporting it and the more I find support for countervailing arguments. Most of them had gotten smaller even before the earliest efforts at a policy on exclusivity of year articles. The other two of those articles got bigger ''after'' this essay was created and one reached its greatest length when it had gotten elevated to guideline status. These are exactly the opposite effects we'd expect if the hypothesis was true. That suggests that not only is this essay not creating smaller articles but also that it isn't having even the selectivity effects that its proponents envisioned. [[User:Eggishorn|Eggishorn]] [[User talk:Eggishorn|(talk)]] [[Special:Contributions/Eggishorn|(contrib)]] 17:55, 20 October 2017 (UTC)
:::::::First, just some minor nit-picking: Xtools doesn't track article size perfectly. I think it just gives the size at the end of the year. So, for example, the largest that 2007 ever got was actually 128,324 bytes on August 18, 2008. Ultimately, I don't know how much of a difference that makes, and I don't feel like going through and checking all of them; I think your general point still stands.
:::::::Your argument that the recommendations of WP:AS should be ignored is an interesting one, and I hadn't thought about that. I had just kind of assumed that the people who created WP:AS created those recommendations for good reason, but that is merely an assumption.
:::::::However, accepting that the general recommendations of WP:AS are still valid, your greater argument (that you don't see the need) strikes me as flawed. There was a problem (as seen in 2008); RY was created to address that problem. The fact that there has been no problem since then is as much proof that this has been working as it is that there's no need for it.
:::::::You can also compare the growth of year articles over time. Whereas most non-RY but still relatively recent year articles have grown over time as little by little people add births, deaths, and events (especially those from the late 80s into the 90s), RY articles have generally held pretty stable, which I see as evidence that RY is working. -- [[User:Irn|irn]] ([[User talk:Irn|talk]]) 22:09, 20 October 2017 (UTC)
*'''No''' this "birth of the internet" or "Birth of Wikipedia" is a red herring, and a really unhelpful one, especially to our readers who are not aware (nor should they be) of the arcane machinations of project selection criteria. Books and encyclopedias were printed before, during and after the internet boom, and no-one is talking about listing everyone who died in any year in the year article, that's already covered elsewhere. The delineation is completely fake and totally unnecessary. [[User:The Rambling Man|The Rambling Man]] ([[User talk:The Rambling Man|talk]]) 15:42, 20 October 2017 (UTC)
:The RY guideline was created to counter the flood of insufficiently notable events and deaths which were being added to recent year articles. In the absence of restriction on entries, the more recent a Year article is, the longer it tends to be. Media coverage has increased massively during the last few decades. [[User:Jim Michael|Jim Michael]] ([[User talk:Jim Michael|talk]]) 18:42, 20 October 2017 (UTC)
::Adequately and evidentially disproven above. Cheers! [[User:The Rambling Man|The Rambling Man]] ([[User talk:The Rambling Man|talk]]) 08:36, 21 October 2017 (UTC)
*'''No''' per The Rambling Man. [[User:Double sharp|Double sharp]] ([[User talk:Double sharp|talk]]) 10:29, 21 October 2017 (UTC)
:::The fact that, during the 2010s, year articles covering the 80s and 90s have been greatly expanded - whilst RY articles haven't - is proof that the RY guideline is necessary and was effective. If anything, it should cover more years. [[User:Jim Michael|Jim Michael]] ([[User talk:Jim Michael|talk]]) 15:35, 21 October 2017 (UTC)
::::Like...... all years!!!!!!! Checkmate. [[User:The Rambling Man|The Rambling Man]] ([[User talk:The Rambling Man|talk]]) 18:59, 21 October 2017 (UTC)
*'''No''' The fact that, even at their largest extents, no year article of any recency shows up anywhere on LongPages proves that the repeated argument that the guideline is "necessary" is either personal preference of a tiny handful of editors or outdated information. The project is more than capable of handling year article pages of unrestrained length. [[User:Eggishorn|Eggishorn]] [[User talk:Eggishorn|(talk)]] [[Special:Contributions/Eggishorn|(contrib)]] 17:27, 21 October 2017 (UTC)
::The Year articles which have been most expanded are those which are the most recent not to be covered by RY. If the RY guideline hadn't been implemented, the years covered by RY would be the longest of all the Year articles. Very long articles full of events and deaths that aren't internationally notable would dilute the value of the articles and would reduce the number of people reading the sub-articles such as 2017 in science and 2017 in the United States. [[User:Jim Michael|Jim Michael]] ([[User talk:Jim Michael|talk]]) 21:38, 21 October 2017 (UTC)
:::Prove your assertion, and even if you could, that's a problem because.... ? [[User:The Rambling Man|The Rambling Man]] ([[User talk:The Rambling Man|talk]]) 22:04, 21 October 2017 (UTC)
:::By the way, so-called "very long articles full of ... deaths which aren't inernationally notable" such as [[Deaths in 2017]] receive an average of [https://tools.wmflabs.org/pageviews/?project=en.wikipedia.org&platform=all-access&agent=user&range=latest-20&pages=Deaths_in_2017 105,000 views per day], while the curated and heavily managed [[2017]] gets around 5,500. Why are you working so hard to ensure our [[WP:READER|readers]] avoid these cherry-picked pages and head straight for the comprehensive versions? [[User:The Rambling Man|The Rambling Man]] ([[User talk:The Rambling Man|talk]]) 22:11, 21 October 2017 (UTC)
::::No-one is suggesting that Deaths in 2017 and similar articles be deleted or reduced in length. They're so long that they're divided by month. The deaths list for the current year is always one of the most frequently viewed pages because it's where readers who are looking for information about people who died recently. All those deaths can't be and shouldn't be on the relevant year article.
::::You appear to be implying that RY articles would be read more often if they were longer. That's almost certainly true, but it would also almost certainly significantly reduce the number of people who would read the subarticles, such as 2017 in music and 2017 in the United Kingdom. Many people go directly to either one of the subarticles, or to the articles of the people or events which they want to read. I disagree with your assertion that lengthening RY articles is in the interests of our readers. [[User:Jim Michael|Jim Michael]] ([[User talk:Jim Michael|talk]]) 13:36, 22 October 2017 (UTC)
:::::I disagree with your continued assertions of what should be testable facts without any evidence to back it up. ''How'' do we know that longer year articles would "...almost certainly significantly reduce..." readership of any articles? Did we test that previously? Are there readership trends that can be linked to? Is it anecdotal memory or personal supposition? Where is the evidence to support these conclusions? [[User:Eggishorn|Eggishorn]] [[User talk:Eggishorn|(talk)]] [[Special:Contributions/Eggishorn|(contrib)]] 16:30, 22 October 2017 (UTC)
:::::Indeed, it's tiring to combat the continual reiteration of the "Kim Kardashian" argument or the "unpopular around a watercooler" claims. These are '''absolutely not''' what our readers believe, and '''absolutely not''' what our community believes. One could conjure up 100 arguments in an attempt to claim some kind of RY boundary exists, but the simple fact of the matter is that it really doesn't. Apply a common approach to '''all''' year articles. Some will have more than others. A good comparison is taking a look at the content in [[The Boat Races 2016]] and [[The Boat Race 1963]] for example. Both are comprehensive, ''for the available material'', and that's what our readers expect. They don't suddenly expect a cut-off point at which some items are mysteriously (to them, because they don't and shouldn't need to read the '''essay''' at RY) aren't allowed. That's not serving our [[WP:READER|readers]] well at all. And honestly, this is 2017, all this talk of "long pages" relating to >100KB, give me strength, I have a <1MB/s connection at home and I can cope with just about every page Wikipedia throws at me. It only actually gets a little worse when rendering pages with tons of transcluded templates, and articles such as [[2017]] don't have that all. So, time to get with the present people. TL;dr: we may need some criteria, but they should apply to '''all''' year articles and we shouldn't be scared of large articles!! [[User:The Rambling Man|The Rambling Man]] ([[User talk:The Rambling Man|talk]]) 18:10, 22 October 2017 (UTC)
*'''Comment''' I think a really important point is being missed here. Irn and Jim - why are we working so hard to create weird, inexplicably cherry-picked annual summaries of incomplete information, based on POV and suffering problems with bias and arguments regarding criteria, when the supposedly more bloated and horrible articles of complete information receive '''''20 times''''' the daily hits? Sounds like people aren't liking your annual summaries. [[Special:Contributions/62.255.118.6|62.255.118.6]] ([[User talk:62.255.118.6|talk]]) 16:15, 23 October 2017 (UTC)
*:Yes, as I noted above, the RY articles seem to get a readership about equivalent to a weak DYK while the main "Deaths in..." articles receive nearly as much interest as the Main Page. So in any language, that would seem to imply that readers prefer the comprehensive list to the cherry-picked list, by about 20 to 1. Ironically, we have some of the regulars here "maintaining" articles like [[2010s]] which (despite it being three years from completion) is already at >370KB. What a terrible mishmash of ideas, doctrine, implementation and enforcement. Pity our readers. [[User:The Rambling Man|The Rambling Man]] ([[User talk:The Rambling Man|talk]]) 19:12, 23 October 2017 (UTC)


Sorry for the big post: This is actually what brought me to this ol’ mess to begin with. I was in the office discussing the spate of deaths to have occurred in the last year and ventured onto Wikipedia for a ballpark figure – I went in via the year and noticed several deaths were missing.
Also, the link to the guidelines has been commented out on the 2009 page. Perhaps its addition requires discussion there? &mdash; [[User:Ken g6|Ken g6]] ([[User talk:Ken g6|talk]]) 05:26, 28 January 2009 (UTC)


There was no explanation as to why they were not included, no explanation that the year article was a cherry picked summary, how this cherry picking was undertaken, by who and why. It just appeared like an article inexplicably missing information.
:I've redisplayed the link. Even though casual editors may still miss/misunderstand/ignore it, it's more likely to be seen if it's displayed rather than hidden. At the same time I had to remove a whole heap of edits of exactly the sort this article is trying to prevent being added! MOre than one editor is involved so it would help if everyone else could keep an eye on this, it's a real pain having to remove them when it's too late to revert!! <span style="color:#0000f1">DerbyCountyinNZ</span> 00:13, 29 January 2009 (UTC)


I then came across the ‘deaths in’ article and found a comprehensive list. It occurred to me that I would never use the Year article from that point forward, because it would be missing information and perhaps I wouldn’t know what was missing or why - the article would basically be erroneous and redundant.
I think that there shouldn't be the Three Continent Rule, because it seems unnecessary. Please consider. <small><span class="autosigned">—Preceding [[Wikipedia:Signatures|unsigned]] comment added by [[User:AliDincgor|AliDincgor]] ([[User talk:AliDincgor|talk]] • [[Special:Contributions/AliDincgor|contribs]]) 03:05, 31 January 2009 (UTC)</span></small><!-- Template:Unsigned --> <!--Autosigned by SineBot-->


Realising this would be true of all year articles, I thought I’d see what was going on ‘under the hood’. At first I thought a better criteria for inclusion should be established which helped make it clear to readers (like me) what the situation was. I must say I’ve been pretty shocked by the behaviour of Arthur Rubin, an admin, and a handful of others, most notably Jim Michael, who have been so difficult and averse to change. The regulars here have taken things personally, shown incredible ownership issues, even resorting to lying to discredit another editor, talk page harassment, warnings and general roadblocking to keep the status quo, which considering the mess, seemed utterly irrational and in no way putting the readers and the project first.
== Deaths ==


That aside, and having learnt more about the Recent Years differential, I find the whole thing to be an even bigger, convoluted and confusing mess – especially when looking through the eyes of a reader.
I have a proposal for the deaths section. What if we limit it to a quota of 25 people in the deaths section only? That way, only really and truly notable deaths will be listed and people will have to present a very convincing case. Other deaths can be listed on the deaths page. [[User:Wrad|Wrad]] ([[User talk:Wrad|talk]]) 18:02, 8 January 2009 (UTC)
:How would we decide the 25? It would cause a huge debate on the talkpages and generally would be a mess IMO. People will feel slighted that the person they wanted in didn't get in, editors will accuse each other of regional biases, etc. Personally, I like the 10 language rule. I think it worked well on the 2008 article. Some months we have 20 deaths and for other months we have closer to 10 deaths. All in all it looks like we have a similar number of deaths and events on the article, so one section isn't disproportionally larger than the other. Then again I am the one who proposed the 10 language criteria in the first place so I may be a bit biased. --[[User:Tocino|Tocino]] 21:41, 11 January 2009 (UTC)


We don’t need Recent Years. Nobody outside of Wikipedia understands. It’s only defence seems to be to ensure Year articles '''''don’t become comprehensive accounts of what happened that year'''''. Read that back and tell me you don’t instantly recoil and think WHAT? And WHY? Wikipedia is an encyclopaedia. It should be showing comprehensive and complete information. It’s not Heat magazine, providing tasty snippets of favourite deaths and events. We don’t have the means to justify cherry-picking – we aren’t a source that is supposed to operate under a bias, or for a target audience. We are supposed to be an impartial, factual record. We shouldn’t be writing articles with the mentality of “Hey! We are Wikipedia and these are the deaths and events we think are most important!” So Year articles very much should be what the core ‘owners’ are fighting against – a comprehensive record of events and deaths that year.
:I have no idea what sort of criteria could be used to limit it to 25/year. There must be some way of reducing the list to 5-10/month. For eg January 2009 has so far (I have italicised those who I don't believe are sufficiently notable):


Or they shouldn’t exist at all and we should stop duplicating information in an unclear, misleading manner that readers have zero clue about. As how would anyone know that the list of deaths they found in 2017 (or any year) was missing important information? If it was Arthur and Jim’s article, in 2017 major earthquakes and shootings would not have happened and famous people like Bruce Forsyth, Sean Hughes and the co-founder of an international seminal rock band would not have died. Is this really what we want to be showcasing?
* ''[[January 1]] - [[Nizar Rayan]], Palestinian Hamas military and political leader (b. [[1959]])'' -- Frankly not a Head of State or just one of many leaders in a minor conflict.
* ''[[January 1]] - [[Johannes Mario Simmel]], Austrian writer (b. [[1924]])'' -- Although he has won various awards, is he likely to be known outside the serious literary community?
* [[January 1]] - [[Helen Suzman]], South African activist and politician (b. [[1917]])
* ''[[January 3]] - [[Pat Hingle]], American actor (b. [[1924]])'' -- Extensive career but limited major roles
* ''[[January 11]] - [[Pio Laghi]], Italian Roman Catholic Cardinal (b. [[1922]])'' -- Is he really likely to be known outside the RC hierarchy?
* [[January 12]] - ''[[Claude Berri]], French film director (b. [[1934]])'' -- One BAFTA win but unlikely to be widely known outside the film community
* [[January 12]] - ''[[Arne Næss]], Norwegian philosopher (b. [[1912]])'' -- Seems to be an important philosopher, but not sure this makes him truly internationally notable
* [[January 13]] - [[Patrick McGoohan]], Irish-American actor (b. [[1928]])
* [[January 14]] - [[Ricardo Montalbán]], Mexican actor (b. [[1920]])


In my mind, scrap Recent Years entirely. Year articles can provide links to the more comprehensive lists at country-based year articles, and the complete ‘Deaths in’ articles. There is zero need to duplicate information, especially incomplete information, with no explanation to the reader and no clear rationale for doing so. [[Special:Contributions/62.255.118.6|62.255.118.6]] ([[User talk:62.255.118.6|talk]]) 12:55, 24 October 2017 (UTC)
Can't see there would be much argument about Suzman, McGoohan and Montalban. Basically I think anyone who is included should be expected to be widely (geographically) known outside their particular field. If they are only widely known within their field then they should be included on that sub-category page (eg [[2009 in film|film]], [[2009 in music|music]], [[2009 in television|television]], [[2009 in sports|sports]] etc) and if they are only famous in their own country then in the "2009 in country" page. Cheers, [[User:DerbyCountyinNZ|DerbyCountyinNZ]] ([[User talk:DerbyCountyinNZ|talk]]) 03:52, 15 January 2009 (UTC)


:Sean Hughes and Scott Putesky aren't among the most important people to have died this year - they're not even among the most important in their respective countries.
:Having a quota would be wrong, as the number of internationally notable people that die during a given period varies considerably. In the case of 2009: note how few names there are in the February Deaths section. On 25 June, two very notable people, Fawcett and Jackson, died. A quota by nationality, field etc would also be wrong, as there are two boxers, Arguello and Gatti, in July Deaths. A quota system would mean excluding some very internationally notable people because another internationally notable person from the same field or country died during the same month / year, or excluding some worthy of being listed, simply because too many other people died that day / week / month / year. Under a quota by country and / or profession, if former US presidents George H.W. Bush and Jimmy Carter die in the same month, you would have to exclude one of them, due to a rule saying you can't have two people from the same profession and the same country listed in the same month. Think how ridiculous that would be, to exclude a former US Pres from the deaths section, whilst including little-known writers and bit-part actors who retired decades ago just because of a quota. I don't see any advantage to a quota; it would certainly not prevent the long arguments and edit wars about inclusion. It could make matters worse, with arguments such as "he's more notable than her" replied with "no he's not, no-one under 60 in my country has heard of him, millions of people have heard of her", etc. Keeping it the way it is is better, as each decedant is judged on his own international notability. [[User:Information yes|Information yes]] ([[User talk:Information yes|talk]]) 08:54, 22 August 2009 (UTC)
:Information being duplicated is inevitable. Articles such as 2017 in music, 2017 in film and 2017 in science will include some of the info that's on 2017 in the United States, 2017 in the United Kingdom etc. [[User:Jim Michael|Jim Michael]] ([[User talk:Jim Michael|talk]]) 19:42, 24 October 2017 (UTC)
::Yes, it would be much easier for our readers, and much more comprehensive, to point at [[Deaths in 2017]]. Burying each notable death or omitting it entirely because of a personal preference or arcane selection criterion should be discouraged, the pageviews clearly make a case for the comprehensive [[WP:GNG]] list, rather than this rather opaquely selected group of "super notable" individuals. Page length is not an issue by the way, this is 2017 now, not 2002 when most of us dreamed of free dial-up accounts at Compuserve. [[User:The Rambling Man|The Rambling Man]] ([[User talk:The Rambling Man|talk]]) 20:00, 24 October 2017 (UTC)
::{{reply to|Jim Michaels}} So why duplicate it further unnecessarily in a clandestine, confusing and incomplete manner? [[Special:Contributions/62.255.118.6|62.255.118.6]] ([[User talk:62.255.118.6|talk]]) 12:21, 25 October 2017 (UTC)
:::At the end of each year, many mainstream media sources produce lists of people who died during the year; some produce lists much earlier of those who've died during the year so far. Those lists don't usually include people of marginal notability - they're shorter lists of the more important people. We should do likewise - and we do. No-one's claiming that RY articles would be so long that they would take a long time to load or would crash. We're providing a concise review of the events & deaths of each year. [[User:Jim Michael|Jim Michael]] ([[User talk:Jim Michael|talk]]) 12:55, 25 October 2017 (UTC)
::::No, that's not what's being provided at all, as evidenced by page views. If readers genuinely felt they were getting something positive from these RY articles, they'd received more than an average DYK's worth of hits per day. The current approach may serve the needs and wishes of the established users here, but that is in direct contradiction of all the evidence suggesting that the current approach does not serve the general community of editors well, nor, most importantly, our readers. Take an example. [[2005]] received an average of 440 page views per day over the past month. Thats only twice as many page views as '''my own talk page'''. No-one is interested in these RY articles, they contain (to our readers) a bizarrely selected set of events and a group of "super notable" deaths, the criteria for which is completely undetermined. Little wonder no-one outside the users here are really interested in such articles. Concise (in this situation) is the enemy of the reader. This is [[WP:PAPER|not a paper encyclopedia]]. [[User:The Rambling Man|The Rambling Man]] ([[User talk:The Rambling Man|talk]]) 20:02, 26 October 2017 (UTC)
::::{{reply to|Jim Michael}} Mainstream media sources have a target demographic they shape their content for. Wikipedia is an encyclopaedic database of information. We shouldn't be cultivating POV lists, especially when doing so is highly contentious and barely worth doing in terms of readership. Encyclopaedias should strive to provide complete information. Not half the information with no explanation or warning that what we are presenting is missing so much. [[Special:Contributions/62.255.118.6|62.255.118.6]] ([[User talk:62.255.118.6|talk]]) 12:23, 27 October 2017 (UTC)


*'''No''' - There should be the same format and consistency throughout, The whole "before 2002 this applies and after 2002 this applies" makes no sense, Apply one consistent format or whatever throughout all years. –[[User:Davey2010|<span style="color: blue;">'''Davey'''</span><span style="color: orange;">'''2010'''</span>]]<sup>[[User talk:Davey2010|<span style="color: navy;">'''Talk'''</span>]]</sup> 15:59, 27 October 2017 (UTC)
== Making it a guideline now ==
::Then we need to establish a set of inclusion criteria for all year articles. [[User:Jim Michael|Jim Michael]] ([[User talk:Jim Michael|talk]]) 17:48, 27 October 2017 (UTC)
:::<s>I agree Jim, By all means start another RFC to establish a criteria (I'm only saying you because you're the most knowledgable with all this), Thanks, –[[User:Davey2010|<span style="color: blue;">'''Davey'''</span><span style="color: orange;">'''2010'''</span>]]<sup>[[User talk:Davey2010|<span style="color: navy;">'''Talk'''</span>]]</sup> 17:57, 27 October 2017 (UTC)</s>
:::No, that's not true. The "non-RY" articles, i.e. everything from 2001 backwards, have had no inclusion criteria applied whatsoever. Why do we have literally hundreds of articles about year events without any criteria and yet around 16 '''with''' criteria, most of which have been deemed patently unsuitable? We could just rely on our community to decide what is in and what is out, that's a perfectly Wikipedian manner of inclusion, and presumably how every single article from [[2001]] backwards has operated for some time now. We have GNG and community consensus, that's all we need! [[User:The Rambling Man|The Rambling Man]] ([[User talk:The Rambling Man|talk]]) 22:18, 27 October 2017 (UTC)
::::They should all have criteria, but writing and establishing them has been neglected. Older years haven't had as much added to them, so the problem of insufficiently notable additions is less severe there. The RY criteria were established to stem the flow to the worst-affected year articles. [[User:Jim Michael|Jim Michael]] ([[User talk:Jim Michael|talk]]) 01:28, 28 October 2017 (UTC)
:::::If the thousands of pre-2001 articles have been fine for time immemorial then there's no logic in trying to apply any kind of RY at all. And we have plenty of consensus here agreeing with that position, so we will simply mark RY as historical and move on. [[User:The Rambling Man|The Rambling Man]] ([[User talk:The Rambling Man|talk]]) 06:51, 28 October 2017 (UTC)
::::::Not since [[time immemorial]]; WP was created in 2001. They aren't fine - they need inclusion criteria because insufficently notable events, births and deaths are frequently added to them.
::::::Another reason for having a higher entry bar for recent years compared to older ones is that recent years have far more subarticles to accommodate the many more entries. [[User:Jim Michael|Jim Michael]] ([[User talk:Jim Michael|talk]]) 16:55, 28 October 2017 (UTC)
:::::::No, that's not true. They're just fine. Check [https://tools.wmflabs.org/pageviews/?project=en.wikipedia.org&platform=all-access&agent=user&range=latest-20&pages=2001|2000|2002|2003 this out], it demonstrates that the two years ''before'' the RY boundary get 50% more pageviews than the two years ''after'' RY! And even extending that search range demonstrates that RY adds nothing at all to the readership of the recent articles. Our [[WP:READER|readers]] seem to think that articles outside the remit of the RY criteria are ''just fine'' and that's what we're here to do, provide our readers with what they want. [[User:The Rambling Man|The Rambling Man]] ([[User talk:The Rambling Man|talk]]) 17:12, 28 October 2017 (UTC)
::::::::That supports my assertion to a degree. The articles that weren't under RY are longer, so they receive more views - but there are fewer sub-articles than there are for recent years. The RY criteria had the effect of diverting many readers from the main page to its subarticles for more in-depth coverage devoted to its topic/country. [[User:Jim Michael|Jim Michael]] ([[User talk:Jim Michael|talk]]) 17:59, 28 October 2017 (UTC)
:::::::::No, it directly contradicts what you've just said. The years prior to RY are more popular than the RY ones, and the years prior to RY have no guidelines. This is all about serving our readers, and the RY articles, per the evidence, clearly do not. Readers are not diverted elsewhere, those articles are seldom viewed. Anyway, we have a clear consensus here to remove RY altogether, so I think we're done for now! [[User:The Rambling Man|The Rambling Man]] ([[User talk:The Rambling Man|talk]]) 18:01, 28 October 2017 (UTC)
::::::::::They're viewed less often because many readers go directly to the sub-article(s) which they are interested in. [[User:Jim Michael|Jim Michael]] ([[User talk:Jim Michael|talk]]) 18:04, 28 October 2017 (UTC)
:::::::::::{{cn}}. [[User:The Rambling Man|The Rambling Man]] ([[User talk:The Rambling Man|talk]]) 18:08, 28 October 2017 (UTC)
:::::::::::::The more recent a year article is, the more sub-articles it has. The total number of views of all sub-articles for a year increase the more recent it is. That proves that more readers are going to the sub-articles for recent years. [[User:Jim Michael|Jim Michael]] ([[User talk:Jim Michael|talk]]) 18:30, 28 October 2017 (UTC)
::::::::::::::No Jim, that's not true. There are hundreds of articles prior to RY which are sub-articles of years. RY doesn't have exclusive rights over sub-articles. Please don't continue to make false assertions. [[WP:DISRUPTSIGNS]]. [[User:The Rambling Man|The Rambling Man]] ([[User talk:The Rambling Man|talk]]) 18:35, 28 October 2017 (UTC)
:::::::::::::::I didn't claim that RY has exclusive rights over sub-articles. I said that the older the year, the fewer sub-articles it has. The larger number of sub-articles for recent years means that many readers go to those sub-articles - decreasing the viewership for the main articles for recent years. [[User:Jim Michael|Jim Michael]] ([[User talk:Jim Michael|talk]]) 23:40, 29 October 2017 (UTC)
::::::::::::::::It doesn't really matter what you believe to be the case, we have a clearcut consensus that RY is no longer required. [[User:The Rambling Man|The Rambling Man]] ([[User talk:The Rambling Man|talk]]) 06:52, 30 October 2017 (UTC)
*'''No''' per TRM. If there is going to be a set criteria at all, which might itself be overly bureaucratic as opposed to just the normal BRD cycle, they should be standardized across all years. Looking at recent discussions on this topic, it seems that this guideline is used to artificially relocate items that would've made into pre-RY articles on the basis of arbitrary criteria. ---- [[User:Patar knight|Patar knight]] - <sup>[[User talk:Patar knight|chat]]</sup>/<sub>[[Special:Contributions/Patar knight|contributions]]</sub> 14:55, 30 October 2017 (UTC)
*'''Comment''' no comments have been made on this discussion for nearly '''four weeks''' so I suggest it is closed according to the consensus. [[User:The Rambling Man|The Rambling Man]] ([[User talk:The Rambling Man|talk]]) 09:09, 26 November 2017 (UTC)
*'''Kind of?''' 2002 is very arbitrary, but I can see applying a different set of standards to the current year (and perhaps the previous year) to prevent issues with [[WP:RECENTISM]]. On the other hand, I see no reason to distinguish between 2001 and 2008. ~ [[User:BU Rob13|<b>Rob</b><small><sub>13</sub></small>]]<sup style="margin-left:-1.0ex;">[[User talk:BU Rob13|Talk]]</sup> 17:26, 28 November 2017 (UTC)
*:Do you think our readers expect such an arbitrary delineation? [[User:The Rambling Man|The Rambling Man]] ([[User talk:The Rambling Man|talk]]) 17:27, 28 November 2017 (UTC)


I'm sure this guideline will grow with time, but for the most part we all seem agreed on this. I'm going to move it out of project space. [[User:Wrad|Wrad]] ([[User talk:Wrad|talk]]) 00:10, 13 January 2009 (UTC)
*'''Comment''' time to close this discussion and end the debate. There's a clear consensus against this arbitrary delineation between the format of so-called "recent year" articles, there's been no substantive addition to this debate for several weeks, so it's time to finally resolve this. [[User:The Rambling Man|The Rambling Man]] ([[User talk:The Rambling Man|talk]]) 08:39, 12 December 2017 (UTC)


* '''Neutral''' – Special guidelines for recent years may not be required at all. If we do keep any, they should be drawn out from wide community input, instead of the walled garden approach that has been prevalent since this guideline was established. — [[User:JFG|JFG]] <sup>[[User talk:JFG|talk]]</sup> 12:13, 15 December 2017 (UTC)
== How do people learn about this? ==


*'''Comment''' – Close requested.[https://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=Wikipedia:Administrators%27_noticeboard/Requests_for_closure&diff=815533255&oldid=815512872] — [[User:JFG|JFG]] <sup>[[User talk:JFG|talk]]</sup> 12:13, 15 December 2017 (UTC)
Experience on [[2009]] so far suggests that people do not know about this guidance and it is difficult to keep the page in line with it in part because of this. Is there a reason why we can't have a link actually at the top of the page rather than more or less hidden (and unclickable) to be found only by those who edit the Events section? [[User:Dougweller|dougweller]] ([[User talk:Dougweller|talk]]) 08:24, 6 February 2009 (UTC)
{{Archive bottom}}


== "Days of the year" guidelines ==
== New Format Year Articles Solution ==


We should always favour the most simple, clear and logical way to present our information.
This page is a good start, but there appears to be a lot of room for improvement. The 3 continent rule, for instance, is [[necessary but not sufficient]], and I think we could use some more sufficiency.


It’s my opinion that there is no logical need to differentiate recent years from non-recent years, as discussed above.
Looking around for better guidelines, I happened upon a page that I initially thought listed other guidelines for Recent years; but upon closer inspection, it's actually [[Wikipedia:Days of the year]]. Many of these guidelines are applicable to Recent years. For example, I note that "Standing the test of time" would be a good complement to the 3CR, making it more clear that breaking news that gets picked up on 3 continents is not automatically eligible for recent year articles.


Wikipedia is NOT a media company with a POV tailored to a target demographic. We are an encyclopaedic source of complete information. We should always strive to avoid creating content according to bias. Cultivating discriminate lists IS creating content according to bias. The criteria by which we are trying to cultivate these lists, is controversial in itself, as the notion of notability is subjective and we as editors cannot even agree what it is, or on a way to measure it.
I think most of the Days of the year guidelines should be included in Recent years, with appropriate adjustments as necessary.


The simplest, clearest and most logical step forward would be to simply stop doing it. There is no coherent argument as to why we should be doing it. “Other media sources do it” – well, we aren’t a media source. “It’s helpful to our readers” – our readers don’t seem to visit these cherry-picked articles at all, and much favour the comprehensive lists RY link to. “It presents information in a clearer way” – well, it doesn’t because the reader is completely in the dark; nowhere in these articles is it explained that the events/deaths listed are incomplete, why they are incomplete, why specific information may be missing or how the process works.
&mdash; [[User:Ken g6|Ken g6]] ([[User talk:Ken g6|talk]]) 01:30, 19 February 2009 (UTC)


So I propose a completely simple resolution, that avoids POV, conflict, controversy, argument, duplication and confusion. Just YEAR articles, formatted thus:
:I agree! They look good, especially [[Wikipedia:Days of the year#Standing the test of time|this one]]. {{#if:DerbyCountyinNZ|<span style="background-color:red;color:lime;">DerbyCountyinNZ</span>|<span style="color:lime;">red</span>}} 04:13, 19 February 2009 (UTC)


::Since you've stumbled across [[WP:DOY]] and found it useful, perhaps you would consider adding your opinions on the talk page about making it an official guideline. It is indeed a de facto guideline and it is practiced 100%, but it needs the stamp of approval which has been tough to get. More input would be helpful. You may run into the same pitfalls here with narrowing notability requirements. -- <font color="#000080">Mufka</font> [[User:Mufka|<sup>(u)</sup>]] [[User talk:Mufka|<sup>(t)</sup>]] [[Special:Contributions/Mufka|<sup>(c)</sup>]] 12:13, 19 February 2009 (UTC)


----
== Deaths (and Births) ==


'''20XX'''
At present the criteria for inclusion is articles '''on wikipedia''' in 10 different languages. Should this be seen as a minimum or the one and only criteria. Is someone such as [[Abel Paz]] sufficiently notable when his article contains '''no''' references at all? And should someone whose death is not notable enough for a year page also have their birth removed from the relevant page? Should [[Joan Mary Wayne Brown]] be included in 1906 births when her article has been tagged as an [[Wikipedia:Orphan|orphan]]? Cheers, {{#if:DerbyCountyinNZ|<span style="background-color:red;color:lime;">DerbyCountyinNZ</span>|<span style="color:lime;">red</span>}} 23:49, 26 April 2009 (UTC)
:It is only the minimum criteria. [[User:Wrad|Wrad]] ([[User talk:Wrad|talk]]) 00:43, 27 April 2009 (UTC)
::Good to know I hadn't misunderstood! Perhaps it should be clarified on the main page here? Cheers, {{#if:DerbyCountyinNZ|<span style="background-color:red;color:lime;">DerbyCountyinNZ</span>|<span style="color:lime;">red</span>}} 01:36, 27 April 2009 (UTC)


''--Lede--''
== Scope of this guideline ==


'''Events'''
What constitutes "recent"? How far back should it be applied? {{#if:DerbyCountyinNZ|<span style="background-color:red;color:lime;">DerbyCountyinNZ</span>|<span style="color:lime;">red</span>}} 23:10, 27 May 2009 (UTC)


''By Topic:''
== [[Talk:2009#Andrew Martin, Mitsuharu Misawa]] ==
* Events by topic links
''By Place:''
* Events by place Links


'''Births'''
The issue of the possible inclusion of these pro wrestlers in 2009#Deaths is currently being discussed. As the main proponent of their inclusion has seen fit to gather reinforcements from [[Wikipedia:WikiProject Professional wrestling]] (once it became clear he was not going to get consensus) I thought I would respond in kind. Cheers, {{#if:DerbyCountyinNZ|<span style="background-color:red;color:lime;">DerbyCountyinNZ</span>|<span style="color:lime;">red</span>}} <sup> ([[User talk:DerbyCountyinNZ|Talk]] [[Special:Contributions/DerbyCountyinNZ|Contribs]])</sup> 21:07, 13 August 2009 (UTC)


'''Deaths'''
==Births==
* Link to Deaths in 20XX
Should there be a 9 article guideline specifically for births or is an article in Wikipedia sufficient to establish validity and inclusion into a recent year article? [[User:Ttonyb1|<span style="font-weight:bold; color:blue; letter-spacing: 2px; padding: 1px 3px;"> <i>ttonyb1</i></span>]] ([[User talk:Ttonyb1#top|talk]]) 14:21, 16 August 2009 (UTC)


----
== Referencing required? ==


Is there something somewhere in policy or guidelines mentioning whether or not these types of articles need to have citations, else tagged with templates such as {{tl|unreferenced}}? The reason I ask is that I came across many of these 'year' articles in [[:Category:Articles lacking sources from August 2009]] because they were tagged as unreferenced, but I don't think they should be (ex. [[391 BC]] etc., although I realize these are not 'Recent years' but I wasn't sure where else to post) Anyways, I'd like to quote something official per my post [[Wikipedia_talk:CiterSquad#Tagging_date_articles|here]] and am wondering if there's something I'm missing or just haven't read yet.. -- [[User:OlEnglish|<font size="5">&oelig;</font>]][[User talk:OlEnglish|<sup>&trade;</sup>]] 02:40, 17 August 2009 (UTC)


Job done. Minimal admin, minimal conflict, just a clean source of links to complete, comprehensive information and no need for these redundant, meaningless, unused, time sink POV lists. [[Special:Contributions/62.255.118.6|62.255.118.6]] ([[User talk:62.255.118.6|talk]]) 12:45, 3 November 2017 (UTC)
== Proposed amendment to Deaths criteria ==
:That is a very reasonable and logical argument. Thank you for proposing it! However, I think it misses a key point: these are articles about years. There's no reason that [[2017]] as a year can't have an article explaining what happened that year just like [[2017 in India]] exists as an article explaining what happened in India that year. Just because we're having a hard time reaching consensus doesn't mean we should give up entirely. Also, what would go in the lead? And how would we write the lead while avoiding all of the pitfalls you've enumerated?
:Also, {{tq|Cultivating discriminate lists IS creating content according to bias.}} This is a bit more philosophical, but literally every decision that is made by an editor is subjective and is, therefore, affected by bias. Every edit is the result of someone's opinion. We can't get rid of that; we can only try to create systems to minimize its effect (see, for example, [[WP:SYSTEMICBIAS]]). But even looking at your solution, [[2017 in India]] is subject to the same bias problems as [[2017]], only on a smaller scale: instead of asking which events are of international importance, the question becomes which events are of national importance. You can't avoid that sort of subjectivity; it's present in literally everything we do here. It's just that in this situation, it's more obvious than in others. But the solution shouldn't be to gut the article, but rather to come up with a system to handle these differences of opinion. RY was an attempt at that. It wasn't perfect – the 9 wiki rule is arbitrary and the “international significance” requirement is vague and was interpreted by the most active users in a very restrictive sense, both of which seem to have frustrated many users – but it's better than ditching the year articles all together.
:And there seems to be this idea that because RY is no longer a guideline, it should be disregarded entirely, but I would like to point to the [https://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=Wikipedia_talk:Recent_years&diff=797834641&oldid=797555455 closing decision], which stated {{tq|editors are advised to try to follow by the essay as far as possible, while working in the subject area}}. -- [[User:Irn|irn]] ([[User talk:Irn|talk]]) 13:51, 3 November 2017 (UTC)


::What happened in India in 2017 is not up for the same level of debate. It happened in 2017. It happened in India. There is very little cherry-picking, as the objective is clearer and events are fewer. As it is sourced at 2017 in India, we would simply just have to link to it from the 2017 year article, under ‘by country’. The data would be recorded, and would be filed correctly and logically.
At present the minimum requirement is 9 non-English articles. In the past few monthsthere have been several situations where at the time of death someone had less than 9 non-E articles but then some days weeks (and it one case months) later they were up to 9. There has also been a case of a user deliberately creating foreign language articles with the sole purpose of trying to achieve the minimum. There have also been cases where the manner of death and consequent media coverage has resulted in enough new foreign articles to pass the minimum and thence lengthy discussions as to whether or not they are really notable enough for inclusion in a year page.


::On the other hand, what happened in ‘the world’ in 2017, is entirely up for debate. We don’t have any idea what constitutes as internationally significant. We have different nationalities, with different POV’s, arguing with different ideas of whether something is important or not. Instead of a national gauge of impact we have a varying degrees of crystal balling and conjecture. Cherry-picking what ‘domestic events’ (every event is domestic) is significant to the world incurs offence, exclusion, accusation and argument – which occurs far less under a shared nationality. If we record everything that happened, we may as well just link to the sub-articles and avoid duplication. If we present an abridged list, it is entirely subject to POV/bias as I outlined above. And we would need a reason to do this, and a way of doing so. We don’t have either.
'''Proposal:''' The 9 non-English articles be taken '''at the time of death''' and not subsequently (except by consensus). Realistically if they are not sufficiently notable before their death their actual death should not be an added factor in their notability. This would then require a burden of proof of notability on those wishing to add someone rather than their being added (after achieving 9+) and then a discussion arising as to whether they should be removed. Of course this would still be open to abuse (see Misawa/Martin case above) but it ''should'' hopefully reduce the number/length of talk page disputes. Cheers, {{#if:DerbyCountyinNZ|<span style="background-color:red;color:lime;">DerbyCountyinNZ</span>|<span style="color:lime;">red</span>}} <sup> ([[User talk:DerbyCountyinNZ|Talk]] [[Special:Contributions/DerbyCountyinNZ|Contribs]])</sup> 04:22, 17 August 2009 (UTC)


::I’m not arguing that, because RY is no longer a guideline, we should abandon it. I’m arguing that there is actually no logical reason for RY and no sound way of doing it anyway. Pointing out the country sub-articles as a reason for RY is an erroneous argument. [[Special:Contributions/62.255.118.6|62.255.118.6]] ([[User talk:62.255.118.6|talk]]) 11:39, 6 November 2017 (UTC)
:I agree with this 100%. [[User:Wrad|Wrad]] ([[User talk:Wrad|talk]]) 14:54, 17 August 2009 (UTC)
:::While what is "national" may not be up for the same level of debate, it's still very much up for debate, and I see no reason to believe that any list aggregating national events won't run into the problems with aggregating a list of international events. Just as some events appear "international" to some and merely "national" to others, within a country, you can just as easily have events that appear to be "national" to some and merely "local" to others. (I do agree with you that I would expect there to be less disagreement and less conflict, but, as you've stated, forcing all events off the main year page will draw more attention to the year-in-country articles, which will increase that level of debate.) Essentially, your proposal doesn't solve the problem of a cherry-picked list because the national lists are also inherently cherry-picked. If the cherry-picking is your main concern, the only way I can see around this would be to mandate that the lower-level articles include everything that happens within the borders of a given country – every notable event, every notable birth, and every notable death. If that is your argument, I think that needs to be made explicit. I also think it's untenable.
::I disagree with it 100%. [[User:GaryColemanFan|GaryColemanFan]] ([[User talk:GaryColemanFan|talk]]) 04:10, 22 August 2009 (UTC)
:::That said, systemic bias is my main concern here, and I think this proposal does address systemic bias in a constructive way. I'd like to find a better solution because I think that having an article about each year that actually offers an overview of what happened in that year is useful. But if we can't come up with anything that adequately addresses systemic bias, I'd be willing to support this proposal.
:::tl;dr I disagree with the logic behind your proposal, but I could get behind it if we can't come up with a better way to address systemic bias. -- [[User:Irn|irn]] ([[User talk:Irn|talk]]) 14:56, 6 November 2017 (UTC)


::::Lolz, it amuses me that you are disagreeing with my proposal because it fails to address the possible bias and conflict that exists on the national articles. I’ve clicked through ten random national articles and found a grand total of two comments!
:This needs to be pushed along as it would prevent further cases of edit-warring. One more week should be sufficient. {{#if:DerbyCountyinNZ|<span style="background-color:red;color:lime;">DerbyCountyinNZ</span>|<span style="color:lime;">red</span>}} <sup> ([[User talk:DerbyCountyinNZ|Talk]] [[Special:Contributions/DerbyCountyinNZ|Contribs]])</sup> 20:50, 18 September 2009 (UTC)
::It's been another week and there being no further input and a 2:1 vote in favour (yes I know 3 people isn't many!) I'll make the change. {{#if:DerbyCountyinNZ|<span style="background-color:red;color:lime;">DerbyCountyinNZ</span>|<span style="color:lime;">red</span>}} <sup> ([[User talk:DerbyCountyinNZ|Talk]] [[Special:Contributions/DerbyCountyinNZ|Contribs]])</sup> 04:12, 28 September 2009 (UTC)
:::I reverted it because majority votes aren't used on Wikipedia, and there was certainly no definite consensus proven here. A month and a half with only one supporter of the idea isn't enough to change policy. [[User:GaryColemanFan|GaryColemanFan]] ([[User talk:GaryColemanFan|talk]]) 19:34, 30 September 2009 (UTC)


::::Even if there were heated debate, conflict and bias being thrown around at national level, its completely illogical to suggest we carry on doing something preposterous, because the same preposterousness is happening on sub-articles. That’s close to the ludicrous stuff Jim and Arthur were coming out with in defence of the RY essay (my favourites: “this is the way it’s always been done” and “its better than nothing”).
:::: So what would have been enough to make the change valid/invalid? Your summary[http://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=Wikipedia:Recent_years&curid=20965584&diff=317143621&oldid=316622352] implies that 000's would be needed to vote, (indecently, the opposite is also true, if they ''_didn't_'' want the policy changed they would have voted).
:::: I agree with the change in policy, but that would only make 3-1. [[User:FFMG|FFMG]] ([[User talk:FFMG|talk]]) 20:29, 30 September 2009 (UTC)
:::::No consensus defaults to no change. The question was out there for a month and a half with no consensus. Case closed. [[User:GaryColemanFan|GaryColemanFan]] ([[User talk:GaryColemanFan|talk]]) 20:41, 30 September 2009 (UTC)


::::It’s a shame you also ignore my point that national impact and national notability is infinitely more measurable than international impact and notability. I shouldn’t really need to spell it out but a great national sportsman doesn’t incite an argument about the popularity of the sport. A national celebrity doesn’t incite a fight between people with drastically different awareness of them. An event that made the news in a country undoubtedly had justifiable notability for inclusion, and doesn’t incite a row about how many countries it was reported in, or how many nations it may directly or indirectly effect, immediately or in the future. People will be working from a shared consciousness and bias, even regional, is far far far less hypersensitive and fervent than national, if it is exists at all in some countries.
While [[User:GaryColemanFan|GaryColemanFan]] has made no real argument against this, consensus evidently does not exist. It seems to me that this new criteria would be difficult to enforce. If a name is added a year after the person's death, is someone going to look back at all of the foreign articles to see if they existed at the time of death? Don't take my comment as in favor or against, I'm all for easy to identify inclusion criteria. -- <font color="#000080">Mufka</font> [[User:Mufka|<sup>(u)</sup>]] [[User talk:Mufka|<sup>(t)</sup>]] [[Special:Contributions/Mufka|<sup>(c)</sup>]] 23:21, 30 September 2009 (UTC)


::::So no, what is “national” is not anywhere near the same level of debate and does not suffer from any of the hazards found in the cherry-picking at international level. Your argument doesn't have any weight to it. [[Special:Contributions/62.255.118.6|62.255.118.6]] ([[User talk:62.255.118.6|talk]]) 13:12, 7 November 2017 (UTC)
:The purpose of this amendment is to place greater emphasis on the user adding a person to establish that person's notability. There have been a number of people who have had as few as 5 or 6 non-English articles at the time of their death. This would indicate that they were in fact not particularly notable at the time they died. The fact that have died has led to articles for them being (at last) created does not mean they should be considered "automatically" notable. At present the process has in these cases been:
#A user adds a deceased person to the deaths section being either unaware or ignoring the criteria (which are included in multiple hidden notes in the article).
#The deceased person is deleted for failing to meet the minimum criteria.
#The deceased person reaches the minimum criteria and is again added to the deaths section.
#If someone considers the deceased person to not be of sufficient notability then a discussion is started on the Year talk page.


:::::{{tq|I’ve clicked through ten random national articles and found a grand total of two comments!}} That's because those sub-lists receive almost zero attention. Take India, for example. A country with a billion citizens, yet over 90% of content of [[2016 in India]] was added by four (4) users. The sub-pages for smaller countries border on uselesness. The page [[2017 in Sweden]], as another example, list half as many notable deaths of Swedes than [[2017]], and its events section is a joke! How would delegating the responsibility to those benefit our readers, exactly? — [[User:Yerpo|Yerpo]] <sup>[[User talk:Yerpo|Eh?]]</sup> 14:53, 7 November 2017 (UTC)
For those of us that have been following the Year articles for a while this process gets to be rather tedious. The proposed amendment would make the process:
::::::Perfect example of the ownership issues here at RY. We aren't responsible for 2017, just as India with their billion citizens aren't responsible for India in 2017. We as editors are collectively responsible for all projects. Instead of some Norwegian chap trying to add a recently deceased skier to RY and getting embroiled in a timesink argument born of the subjectivity of notability or international impact or whatever the clandestine criteria buzz-word of the week is, he would add it to Norway. Hey! My idea not only rescues the omnishambles of RY, it also directs content towards and improves the national sub-articles! Thanks for pointing that out, Yerp XXX [[Special:Contributions/62.255.118.6|62.255.118.6]] ([[User talk:62.255.118.6|talk]]) 16:37, 7 November 2017 (UTC)
#A user adds a deceased person to the deaths section being either unaware or ignoring the criteria.
:::::::So now you're trying to force editors to start editing pages they're not interested in? What exactly you're hoping to achieve by that? — [[User:Yerpo|Yerpo]] <sup>[[User talk:Yerpo|Eh?]]</sup> 17:57, 7 November 2017 (UTC)
#The deceased person is deleted for failing to meet the minimum criteria.
::::::::Why are you so rattled by this, Yerpo? I've proposed a helpful solution to a problem, and expressed exactly what I hope to achieve. I've not forced anybody to do anything, and neither would my proposal. If someone is interested enough in an event to add it to a year article, why would they "not be interested in" adding it to the country the event occurred in? Getting all hot and bothered about it is kinda weird. Why aren't you interested in finding a solution? It sometimes feels that RY exists more for the enjoyment of the regulars than for the actual readers we are supposed to be creating content for. Wikipedia isn't a space provider for pet projects. If you want to create a pointless annual review site that nobody visits, strewn with you own personal idea of who and what is important to you, why don't you sign up to a free blogging service or webhost? You could do what you liked then. I don't understand why you insist on doing it here, on an online encyclopaedia. [[Special:Contributions/62.255.118.6|62.255.118.6]] ([[User talk:62.255.118.6|talk]]) 11:57, 8 November 2017 (UTC)
#If someone considers the deceased person to be of sufficient notability then a discussion is started on the Year talk page.
:::::::::Because annual reviews are encyclopedically relevant and, like any other page, they will require some sort of editorial selection. The only question is what kind. You may not remember, but I proposed at least one solution before, and explained why I don't think the laziest solution is good (IIRC, others weren't so enthusiastic about it either). If your personal opinion and feeling is that annual reviews are useless, why don't you just leave RY alone? What's here is certainly better than no content which is what you're proposing. Strawman arguments about my motives/emotions and false accusations about me not wanting to find a solution certainly aren't constructive, they only beg the question what is ''your'' real game here.
:::::::::{{tq|If someone is interested enough in an event to add it to a year article, why would they "not be interested in" adding it to the country the event occurred in?}} I don't know, but the fact is that they aren't. The state of sub-pages speaks for itself, eventhough nothing is preventing editors from adding events to both places (or to a sub-page alone if an event gets rejected here). So the logical conclusion is that your solution would diminish informational value of this encyclopedia - which is something I'm definitely opposed to. If that earns me a "rattled" label from you, well, let's just say that I won't lose any sleep over it. — [[User:Yerpo|Yerpo]] <sup>[[User talk:Yerpo|Eh?]]</sup> 16:37, 8 November 2017 (UTC)
::::::::::The state of the sub pages is due to people posting stuff on RY. So that’s a circular argument. If Year articles became a constructive and useful link set to sub-pages, content would obviously be directed there. Meh, I’m just trying to help – you regulars need to stop acting like I’ve walked up and kicked over your sandcastle. In my opinion, annual reviews belong on news sites, not places which are supposed to offer complete information without bias. You are welcome to defend RY articles to the death, but nobody reads them. Which begs the question of whether they are indeed relevant, helpful or worth the time. Clicking on a year, and seeing a list of sub-categories relevant to that year which are home to comprehensive information, is an entirely logical process. You, Jim and Arthur lolling about making your own personal list of favourite celebs and topics you’ve nattered about with your mates isn’t, and doesn’t seem to be what editors or readers want. Sorry, bud. [[Special:Contributions/62.255.118.6|62.255.118.6]] ([[User talk:62.255.118.6|talk]]) 11:52, 9 November 2017 (UTC)
:::::::::::{{tq|The state of the sub pages is due to people posting stuff on RY. So that’s a circular argument.}} Any evidence that this is actually happening? Even if it were, this would, ironically, disprove your fixed idea that RY lists are irrelevant. Also, thousands of daily views is far from "nobody reads them". So in the light of actual facts and logic, I will take the liberty of ignoring your arrogant description of what people you don't agree with are doing. Don't bother to reply if you're not willing to start contributing more constructively to this discussion. — [[User:Yerpo|Yerpo]] <sup>[[User talk:Yerpo|Eh?]]</sup> 12:54, 9 November 2017 (UTC)
::::::::::::I think it's clear I've contributed quite a lot constructively to this. I've presented a solution and I'm merely addressing your frostily delivered criticisms of it, that I don't find logical at all. Cool, I get it - you aren't on board. When the time comes, just !vote no. But nothing you have said here has really discredited the idea. you know I was speaking comparatively re: viewing figures, it's pretty explicit in my posts. And you surely you don't really believe the state of the sub-articles is a sound defence for retaining RY. But yeah, we've gone as far as we can here - until you are less rattled by the whole thing, there isn't much point chatting anything through with you further. [[Special:Contributions/62.255.118.6|62.255.118.6]] ([[User talk:62.255.118.6|talk]]) 12:18, 10 November 2017 (UTC)
:::::::::::::Sorry, but I don't see the value in repackaging the same idea after it hasn't received support on more than one occasion earlier. Which is why I may have sounded annoyed, but my comments should be understood in this wider context. Anyway, yes, I do believe the state of the sub-articles is a sound defence for retaining RY - that approach to organizing content is not functioning and I've already said what I think about diminishing informational value of this encyclopedia. — [[User:Yerpo|Yerpo]] <sup>[[User talk:Yerpo|Eh?]]</sup> 10:20, 11 November 2017 (UTC)


* This idea has been proposed and rejected before. (Even before [[WP:RY]] was proposed.) As it's a style guide as well as a content guide, more than two or three editors need to be in favor for it to be reconsidered. And the subarticles get more hits because they are allowed to be linked, while the year articles are not, per [[WP:YEARLINK]]. — [[User:Arthur Rubin|Arthur Rubin]] [[User talk:Arthur Rubin|(talk)]] 20:45, 11 November 2017 (UTC)
It seems that those of us concerned with setting or maintaining criteria that can be used on all Year articles are too few in number to make any serious effort at applying even the current criteria to previous years let alone the suggested amendment (and in any case it would obviously be impossible to apply to any year before wiki started!) which is why I put "from 2009".
*:So what? This micro-project now has a much wider audience and as such it's clear that "the way it's always been" is actually not in keeping with the community or the readers. So anything, even previously rejected by the tiny microcosm voting here previously, is perfectly allowable for suggestion. Plus, your claim that {{xt|As it's a style guide as well as a content guide, more than two or three editors need to be in favor for it to be reconsidered.}} needs verifiable evidence. Please provide links to the relevant policies which say "more than two or three editors" need to ratify this suggestion. If not, I'd suggest you stop claiming some kind of authority over this, and other such discussions. [[User:The Rambling Man|The Rambling Man]] ([[User talk:The Rambling Man|talk]]) 21:57, 11 November 2017 (UTC)
*::As a style guide, it '''is''' subject to voting, so it needs more votes in favor now than it had votes against then. There really are no "arguments" to be weighed. — [[User:Arthur Rubin|Arthur Rubin]] [[User talk:Arthur Rubin|(talk)]] 22:03, 11 November 2017 (UTC)
*:::No, you completely failed to answer my request. Please do so, i.e. cite the policy that is backing your continued claims. [[User:The Rambling Man|The Rambling Man]] ([[User talk:The Rambling Man|talk]]) 22:06, 11 November 2017 (UTC)
*:::{{U|Arthur Rubin}}, you didn't respond to this, could you now please provide evidence to back you original claim or redact it, thanks. [[User:The Rambling Man|The Rambling Man]] ([[User talk:The Rambling Man|talk]]) 21:37, 19 November 2017 (UTC)
*Frankly, this feels like giving up. I understand this debate has been contentious, but I still think it's possible to make these articles—particularly the events sections—work properly. As far as the births/deaths, I have no problem keeping them out of the year articles and moving them to sub articles only. That seems reasonable. But we ought to be able to come up with a listing of events for the year. With births/deaths gone, I don't think there would be a problem with having 15-20 events per month. The page would still be manageable, and it would give readers a pretty good idea of what happened worldwide in a given year. [[User talk:Agtx|<span style="color:#8B008B">'''agt'''</span><span style="color:#000000">x</span>]] 13:49, 14 November 2017 (UTC)


::What's logical for deaths is also logical for events. The only arguments against that so far seems to be Yerpo conjuring up weird notions that people will refuse to populate national event pages, and Arthur's whacko "we need a vote to allow this suggestion to be voted on". Both sound quite desperate to me. [[Special:Contributions/62.255.118.6|62.255.118.6]] ([[User talk:62.255.118.6|talk]]) 12:11, 15 November 2017 (UTC)
Of course if we have to wait for at least half of all wiki users to be in favour of the amendment (or any other matter requiring "consensus" then I guess we're all wasting our time! {{#if:DerbyCountyinNZ|<span style="background-color:red;color:lime;">DerbyCountyinNZ</span>|<span style="color:lime;">red</span>}} <sup> ([[User talk:DerbyCountyinNZ|Talk]] [[Special:Contributions/DerbyCountyinNZ|Contribs]])</sup> 23:56, 3 October 2009 (UTC)


:::Actually, deaths are the easier problem to solve, using a combination of RS after the year has passed, as proposed earlier. Events could also work that way, but my idea was to solve deaths first, then talk about events. By the way, ignoring the facts that support the opposing argument and claiming that the argument "weird" is far more desperate than anything I've said. — [[User:Yerpo|Yerpo]] <sup>[[User talk:Yerpo|Eh?]]</sup> 13:18, 15 November 2017 (UTC)
*'''Support:''' Unless somebody here speaks 10 or more languages, it could be quite a challenge to determine whether all the post-death foreign articles actually read like encyclopedia articles or, rather, like obituaries. As it stands, it's hard enough to tell a lot of ''English'' articles apart from a [[WP:NOT|whole bunch of other things]], and while the proposal may not be the [[Answer to Life, the Universe, and Everything]], it might not be a bad start in terms of quality-control. [[User:Cosmic Latte|Cosmic Latte]] ([[User talk:Cosmic Latte|talk]]) 20:39, 15 October 2009 (UTC)
::::Must be pretty rattled to resort to "no, you are!" repertoire. [[Special:Contributions/62.255.118.6|62.255.118.6]] ([[User talk:62.255.118.6|talk]]) 12:15, 17 November 2017 (UTC)
*'''Comment:''' I would have the guideline stipulate, though, that this qualification applies to anyone who dies in 2010 or afterwards (October or November 2009 could also work, but might seem a little random) for two reasons. First, as Mufka implies above, it would be tedious to apply this change retrospectively. And second, it would be unfair to apply it to people who died before Wikipedia became internationally popular. Obviously, [[William Shakespeare]] didn't have 10 non-English articles when he died; but even those who died earlier in this decade might be underrepresented insofar as even the English Wikipedia didn't really take off until the second half of the decade. [[User:Cosmic Latte|Cosmic Latte]] ([[User talk:Cosmic Latte|talk]]) 20:27, 19 October 2009 (UTC)
* So, there is clearly not a consensus for this approach. Shall we close it and move on? — [[User:Arthur Rubin|Arthur Rubin]] [[User talk:Arthur Rubin|(talk)]] 07:22, 26 November 2017 (UTC)
:My intention when making this was that it be applied from either the time it was accepted or from the the present year (ie 2009) onwards (it seemed easier just to use "2009" and deal with the specifics later!). Potentially it could be applied retroactively to say 2007 as wiki was fully underway by then. Of course it would require considerable work and might not be worth the effort. Applying it to 2009 would not be so difficult as there have been a number of discussions about notability based on this issue. I suspect though that achieving consensus (using whatever definition) might be difficult to achive in that regard. {{#if:DerbyCountyinNZ|<span style="background-color:red;color:lime;">DerbyCountyinNZ</span>|<span style="color:lime;">red</span>}} <sup> ([[User talk:DerbyCountyinNZ|Talk]] [[Special:Contributions/DerbyCountyinNZ|Contribs]])</sup> 21:49, 19 October 2009 (UTC)
::: It wasn't an RfC, though - it was an open discussion to see if a way forward could be fleshed out. Not many people running in from other rooms high-fiving me for the idea but still, it's rather colourful to describe "Arthur Rubin and Yerpo don't like it" as "clearly not a consensus" and kinda weird to insist it be "closed"[[Special:Contributions/62.255.118.6|62.255.118.6]] ([[User talk:62.255.118.6|talk]]) 13:46, 27 November 2017 (UTC)

Is 4-1 a consensus? Or shall we wait a few more decades? {{#if:DerbyCountyinNZ|<span style="background-color:red;color:lime;">DerbyCountyinNZ</span>|<span style="color:lime;">red</span>}} <sup> ([[User talk:DerbyCountyinNZ|Talk]] [[Special:Contributions/DerbyCountyinNZ|Contribs]])</sup> 01:32, 25 October 2009 (UTC)
:We should forget about it altogether. The proposal goes against [[Wikipedia:Wikipedia is a work in progress]], which is a good reminder that the current state of things is absolutely meaningless. Articles are created every day about notable topics. Just because an article didn't exist at a certain point in time obviously doesn't mean that the topic is unimportant. Aside from a few biased patrollers on the 2009 page, things are going well. There's no need to mess with anything, as working on a case-by-case basis will prevent notable people from being excluded for no good reason. [[User:GaryColemanFan|GaryColemanFan]] ([[User talk:GaryColemanFan|talk]]) 04:26, 25 October 2009 (UTC)
::I don't think we should forget about the proposed change, one could argue that, in this case, it has nothing, (or not much), to do with [[Wikipedia:Wikipedia is a work in progress]].
::The intent of the change it to prevent a handful of users creating artificial articles/subs, (that, for some reason they did not create when the person was alive), simply to add that person to the 2009 article, to somehow give the illusion of international notability.
::This proposal is saying that in such cases adding the person should be first discussed in the talk page.
::The way I see it, the proposed change is to prevent such users, if the person does genuinely achieves notability after their death, then by all mean, they will be added. But at least a handful of users will not create badly translated articles simply for the sake of having someone listed in the year article.
:: Also, remember those are just guidelines, not hard coded laws that have to be followed at all costs. Consensus will always prevail. The propose changes would allow editors to remove those entries and ask that they'd be discussed further. [[User:FFMG|FFMG]] ([[User talk:FFMG|talk]]) 08:56, 25 October 2009 (UTC)
:::One of the things that I have a huge problem with is that this proposal was put forward specifically in response to one individual ([[Mitsuharu Misawa]]). DerbyCountyinNZ got upset that the discussion didn't go his/her way, so he/she came to this page to find away to avoid having to discuss things in the future. Simply put, the current system works. If someone is truly not internationally notable, a discussion should be used to determine that. A person's inclusion or exclusion shouldn't come down to how active a particular Wikiproject is on some foreign Wikipedia. It should be about the international notability of the person, which is best determined through a consensus-building discussion. Also, remember that, despite just being a guideline, it is used as a hard coded law on the Talk:2009 page, where the three usual suspects do little more than repeat "It's just a guideline, but we've only gone against it once and almost certainly won't do it again." [[User:GaryColemanFan|GaryColemanFan]] ([[User talk:GaryColemanFan|talk]]) 15:59, 25 October 2009 (UTC)
::Your really are making it extremely difficult to remain [[WP:CIVIL]]|civil]]! Quite frankly I have refrained from responding to you until now because I don't seriously expect a reasonable discussion from someone who argued that Ted Kennedy (45 non-English articles, 258 citations, pagesize 160kb) wasn't notable and hadn't heard of Bobby Robson (32 non-English articles, 153 citations, pagesize 76kb), but made s ure that Misawa (9 non-English articles, 24 citations, pagesize 22kb) got included.
You seem to be paranoid that this proposed amendment means Misawa automatically gets removed. There hasn't even been a decision as to when this will be applied let alone backdated (the current criteria hasn't even been applied to 2007). And in any case it could be over-ridden by consensus as was the case last time. I for one have absolutely no expectation that anyone from the [[Wikipedia:WikiProject Professional wrestling|pro wrestling group]] who voted for his inclusion last time is going to change their mind just because of this amendment.
This amendment is in fact a response to a considerable number of cases (particularly in September) where people only met the 9 non-English article minimum after death, their inclusion was questioned and in most cases they were eventually removed. This seems unnecessary and by this amendment the emphasis would be placed on the proof of notability rather the opposite.
Why don't YOU give it up. YOU are the ONLY one who has a problem with this amendment. This project is for those of us who are interested in making the Recent Year pages into quality articles. We are not single issue users. As it says in the opening paragraph "That an event is important to an individual editor, or even to a particular society or nation, is not sufficient ground for its inclusion." {{#if:DerbyCountyinNZ|<span style="background-color:red;color:lime;">DerbyCountyinNZ</span>|<span style="color:lime;">red</span>}} <sup> ([[User talk:DerbyCountyinNZ|Talk]] [[Special:Contributions/DerbyCountyinNZ|Contribs]])</sup> 21:21, 25 October 2009 (UTC)
:My comments on other cases are easy to explain. Simply put, outside of Chappaquiddick, I don't think Ted Kennedy ever did anything notable. He was a Kennedy brother, which is his big claim to fame. On the off-chance that he accomplished something that I've never heard of (and this is coming from someone who met him and talked with him...yes, civilly), he was only in a position to do so because of the family's reputation. As such, he is notable for being a Kennedy. Eunice Kennedy Shriver's inclusion was opposed for the very reason that she was only notable for being a Kennedy...completely forgetting that she helped found the Special Olympics (or, as the now-indefinitely blocked User:Information yes so eloquently put it, all she ever did was work with "retards".). Do I honestly think that Ted Kennedy should be excluded from the 2009 article? Of course not. I was playing devil's advocate and seeing if people could actually come up with a reason for his notability to prove that a double standard was not being applied. Unfortunately, I got little more than assurances that he was "high-profile" and "notable". For what? Nobody would say.
:As for Bobby Robson, I honestly hadn't heard of him. He was clearly not the right person to pick as an example, as looking into it further has shown me that he is definitely notable and internationally recognized. Perhaps this should be a good example of how one person thinking something doesn't make it true for the whole world. That's an important thought that could be applied a lot more frequently on the 2009 article.
:You are saying that a major change needs to take place because of September's events. However, you also say that the people in question were discussed and ultimately removed. Problem solved. Why introduce a new policy when common sense can (and should) be applied? You say that exceptions can be made, but, if we can go back to the example of Mitsuharu Misawa, I have a good idea of what that would have looked like. He didn't have 10 articles because Wikipedia is a work in progress. More articles were created after he died. Would you have been willing to have a reasonable, respectful discussion about the merits of including him? Or would you simply have pointed to the policy and said "Tough luck"? I know the answer, and if you can be honest with yourself, I'm sure you do as well. I don't think that systematic bias should ever rule Wikipedia, so I think any reasonable topic should have a chance at a legitimate discussion. It was made quite clear in the discussion that the majority of the opposition was simply due to a dislike of professional wrestling (for example, you stated that one of your reasons for declaring Misawa not notable was because "Pro wrestling barely qualifies as a sport"...completely ignoring the fact that your feelings on his profession have absolutely no relevance to the discussion). Discussions can help move Wikipedia past this type of issue. Unnecessary, non-negotiable policies can not. [[User:GaryColemanFan|GaryColemanFan]] ([[User talk:GaryColemanFan|talk]]) 22:50, 25 October 2009 (UTC)
::I don't see how the "Work in progress" argument helps. How long do we wait before there is evidence is notable? [[Ed McMahon]], someone I thought was "obviously" notable when he died, had 6 non-E articles at his death and 4 months later has 7 most of which are stubs or unreferenced. [[Billy Mays]] also (after 4 months) now has 7 articles (including the 2 single sentence entries created specifically by a user merely to try and get him to 9 non-E articles). Even if either of them got to 9 non-E articles unless those articles were considerably more substantial there would still not be a sufficient indication of notability.
The problem with the 9 non-E minimum is that it does not specify quality and an unexpected (and hence newsworthy) death often results in an increase in articles but does not mean that the person is well-known in that language/country but merely that someone saw the news and decided to create a wiki article. Given that we can't know for certain if someone is notable in a given country we can only go by their article, if it a stub copied from the English article and has no reference in its own language then it would appear they are not really notable in that country. Yes that could change "eventually", but what if it doesn't?
As for Mitsuhara Misawa the german, french, catalan, spanish, portuguese, italian and one of the asian language articles look to be copies of various parts (usually minimal, sometimes including the list of championships) of the english article. Only a few of them have references (mostly from the NOAH site, only one is not english (the spanish article has a german reference!)). Would I have said tough luck if someone had tried to add him when he died and had less than 9 non-E articles? I wouldn't have said "tough luck" I would have said he didn't meet the criteria. If someone had started a discussion about including him once he did reach 9 non-E articles "would [I] have been willing to have a reasonable, respectful discussion about the merits of including him"? Yes. Do I now think he was internationally notable, given the current state of the majority of his non-English articles 4 months after his death? No. Would I ever consider conceding that he was notable if that was reflected in the majority of his non-E articles? Let's say I would raise no further objections to being included in the 2009 Deaths.
::The 9 non-English articles requirement is probably now inappropriate. As Wikipedia continues to grow, it would be expected that non-Enlish language encyclopedias would expand to include lesser known and lesser-notability subjects. I would propose an entirely different standard - that in the article itself, rather than just listing a name and occupation, require a reason why their death was notable to the year and adds to an understanding of the events of that year. Reserve for the 'Deaths in XXXX' the list of deaths by month. For example, [[2004]] Ronald Reagan (June 5) was the oldest living former president and one of only 6 men alive at the time that had held that office. - In. Percy Wickman (July 3) highest office was being one of the 83 members of one of Canada's 13 provinces (or territories) - Out. It's not so much uniqueness or level, as much as really, how much of an impact did that person's death have on the year itself.[[User:Cander0000|Cander0000]] ([[User talk:Cander0000|talk]]) 00:49, 3 January 2010 (UTC)
:::I generally like that approach, in theory, but in practice it could very quickly become very restrictive. Since a subject's notability is demonstrated (not necessarily ''defined'', but demonstrated) by the presence of a WP article on that subject, and since there are so few "Death of X" articles (like [[Death of Ronald Reagan]] or [[Death of Michael Jackson]]), the deaths section could quickly shrivel up into a very tiny list. Then again, maybe that's a good thing. But since the "deaths" section is distinct from the "events" section, it's implicit in the structure of the article that deaths do not have to be seen as notable ''events''; they simply reflect the deaths of (internationally) known ''people''. I'm not strongly against the suggestion; I just think that the article's structure already solves the what-sort-of-notability problem. There's general agreement, though, that the nine non-English article approach is imperfect. Perhaps your approach is better, but as noted, I have a couple reservations. [[User:Cosmic Latte|Cosmic Latte]] ([[User talk:Cosmic Latte|talk]]) 20:22, 3 January 2010 (UTC)

I want to revisit this proposal again. There still seem to be too many people being added to the Deaths section that are not particularly notable. It seems that some editors are waiting until the deceased person reaches the 9 non-English articles minimum and then adding them. This often happens when no user that is unaware of the minimum criterai has triewd to add them immediately upon their death. I feel that such persons are insufficiently notable to be included but really can't be bothered arguing about each one. It should be encumbant on editors that feel someone should be included despite failing the proposed criteria to justify their inclusion on the talk page. {{#if:DerbyCountyinNZ|<span style="background-color:red;color:lime;">DerbyCountyinNZ</span>|<span style="color:lime;">red</span>}} <sup> ([[User talk:DerbyCountyinNZ|Talk]] [[Special:Contributions/DerbyCountyinNZ|Contribs]])</sup> 07:43, 4 June 2010 (UTC)
:That makes absolutely no sense. If people are adding them when they don't meet the criteria, they should be removed. In the spirit of Wikipedia (a work in progress), however, there is nothing wrong with adding them if they later meet the criteria. Heck, if a time limit mattered on Wikipedia, this failed proposal would have been archived about eight months ago. It's time to stop beating a dead horse and move on with your life. No problem means no solution is necessary. [[User:GaryColemanFan|GaryColemanFan]] ([[User talk:GaryColemanFan|talk]]) 13:53, 4 June 2010 (UTC)

There is an important practical issue here which has been missed. While any fool can see whether there are 9 other Wikipedia articles, having just had a look at this myself, establishing when the article was created may not be easy, involving language skills many of us do not have, and with languages which do not use the Latin alphabet may be virtually impossible for the lay person. Similar problems arise with other criteria based on the quality or content of these articles. On English Wikipedia there are a number of decent, though not necessarily particularly good, articles which are basically a translation of an article from another Wikipedia, or which only use foreign language sources. [[User:PatGallacher|PatGallacher]] ([[User talk:PatGallacher|talk]]) 11:41, 22 August 2010 (UTC)

==Another proposal : Deaths==
We seem to be getting a number of minor actors listed on the Years pages. Although I thought the Deaths section also included Births, it appears it does not. I am concerned the Recent Years pages will become unreadable lists of names that overshadow major events. I am proposing the following change in the wording of the deaths section. The changes are in ''italics'' or are <s>struckout</s>. The following is the proposed wording:

'''Deaths ''and births'''''

Deaths ''and births'' are only to be included if the person <s>dead</s> has articles about him or her on Wikipedia in at least ten languages. (William Shakespeare, for example, has several foreign language articles on him, listed on the left sidebar.) This is a minimum requirement for inclusion. Many articles will not merit inclusion even though they may have enough foreign articles.

[[User:Ttonyb1|<span style="font-weight:bold; color:blue; letter-spacing: 2px; padding: 1px 3px;"> <i>ttonyb1</i></span>]] ([[User talk:Ttonyb1#top|talk]]) 21:12, 19 August 2009 (UTC)

:This makes perfect sense. The only problem might be that users create foreign language articles just to make the minimum requirement which means marginal cases will have to have the foreign language articles checked to make sure they are genuine (which could become tedious). {{#if:DerbyCountyinNZ|<span style="background-color:red;color:lime;">DerbyCountyinNZ</span>|<span style="color:lime;">red</span>}} <sup> ([[User talk:DerbyCountyinNZ|Talk]] [[Special:Contributions/DerbyCountyinNZ|Contribs]])</sup> 09:02, 20 August 2009 (UTC)

== Births/Deaths:Nobel laureates ==

Just a minor formatting question. How should Nobel Prize winners be described in the Births and Deaths sections?

eg
* [[September 8]] &ndash; [[Aage Niels Bohr]], Danish physicist and Nobel Prize laureate (born [[1922]])
OR
* [[September 8]] &ndash; [[Aage Niels Bohr]], Danish physicist, Nobel laureate (born [[1922]])

There are many variations on this such as linking [[Nobel Prize]] or [[Nobel Prize in Chemistry]] which I think we can agree is superfluous.

I favour the second example above as it includes all the necessary information in the briefest form. Cheers, {{#if:DerbyCountyinNZ|<span style="background-color:red;color:lime;">DerbyCountyinNZ</span>|<span style="color:lime;">red</span>}} <sup> ([[User talk:DerbyCountyinNZ|Talk]] [[Special:Contributions/DerbyCountyinNZ|Contribs]])</sup> 22:29, 16 September 2009 (UTC)

== [[Ed McMahon]], [[Willy Ronis]], [[Mary Travers]] ==
Input sought at [[Talk:2009]] regarding their international notability, and hence their eligibility for inclusion in the Deaths section of [[2009]]. [[User:Information yes|Information yes]] ([[User talk:Information yes|talk]]) 00:59, 19 September 2009 (UTC)

== Formats for the Current Year ==

Here are some previous formats for the current year:

1) 2006 (MMVI) is a common year starting on Sunday of the Gregorian calendar. It is also the current year

2) 2007 (MMVII) is the current year, a common year starting on Monday of the Gregorian calendar and the AD/DC Era.

3) 2008 (MMVIII) is the current year, in accordance with the Gregorian calendar, a leap year starting on Tuesday of the Anno Domini/Common Era.

4) 2009 (MMIX) is the current year of the Anno Domino/Common Era, in accordance with the Gregorian calendar. It is a common year starting on Thursday.

Possibilities for 2010:

1) 2010 (MMX) is a common year starting on Friday of the Anno Domini/Common Era, in accordance with the Gregorian calendar. It is the 10th year of the 21st century and 3rd millennium, and the 1st year of the 2010s decade. It is also the current year.

2) 2010 (MMX) is the current year, a common year starting on Friday of the Anno Domini/Common Era, in accordance with the Gregorian calendar. It is the 10th year of the 21st century and 3rd millennium, and the 1st year of the 2010s decade. ([[User:Homerjay90|Homerjay90]] ([[User talk:Homerjay90|talk]]) 19:24, 26 December 2009 (UTC))

Agreed format for 2010:

2010 (MMX) is a common year starting on Friday of the Anno Domini/Common Era, in accordance with the Gregorian calendar. It is the 2010th year of the AD/CE, the 10th year of the 3rd millennium and 21st century, and the 1st year of the 2010s decade. It is also the current year. ([[User:Homerjay90|Homerjay90]] ([[User talk:Homerjay90|talk]]) 07:30, 30 December 2009 (UTC))

:I do not see a reason for a change to the existing format and do not support these changes. I suggest we stay with the format in the article page. [[User:Ttonyb1|<span style="font-weight:bold; color:blue; text-shadow:grey 0.4em 0.4em 0.5em; letter-spacing: 2px; padding: 1px 3px;"> <i>ttonyb</i></span>]] ([[User talk:Ttonyb1#top|talk]]) 07:36, 30 December 2009 (UTC)

::I see no reason to change it either. But, Homerjay90, if you think that the [[WP:RY]] format is not ideal, you might want to start by explaining ''why'' you feel this is the case. Your minimally explained rearrangements of the leads are coming across--at best--as arbitrary, and in many cases as disruptive. If you do not understand why this is so, you might be well-advised to read [[WP:CON]]. [[User:Cosmic Latte|Cosmic Latte]] ([[User talk:Cosmic Latte|talk]]) 15:36, 1 January 2010 (UTC)

:::See continuation discussion under '''Centuries, Milennia, and Decades''' below. [[User:Davshul|Davshul]] ([[User talk:Davshul|talk]]) 19:05, 3 February 2010 (UTC)

Once the clock strikes 2011, could the article for 2011 be as follows?

'''2011''' [[Roman numerals|MMXI]] is a [[common year starting on Saturday]]. In the [[Gregorian calendar]] it is the 2011th year of the [[Common Era]] or [[Anno Domini]] designation, the 11th year of the [[3rd millennium]] and of the [[21st century]], and the 2nd of the [[2010s decade]]. It is also the current year.

or

'''2011''' [[Roman numerals|MMXI]] is the current year, a [[common year starting on Saturday]]. In the [[Gregorian calendar]] it is the 2011th year of the [[Common Era]] or [[Anno Domini]] designation, the 11th year of the [[3rd millennium]] and of the [[21st century]], and the 2nd of the [[2010s decade]]

==Starting on (a) Friday==
How is the "a" ungrammatical? Is this American usage? To me, "starting on Friday" means starting next Friday from now. In fact, is the day the year starts really so important that it has to be the first thing we say about it?--[[User:Kotniski|Kotniski]] ([[User talk:Kotniski|talk]]) 11:19, 1 January 2010 (UTC)

:You'll need to redo the automated links to these calendars (not exactly articles). I would have have preferred <u>common year with January 1 ''as'' Friday</u>, but starting with Friday or on Friday is more accurate than starting on '''a''' Friday. — [[User:Arthur Rubin|Arthur Rubin]] [[User talk:Arthur Rubin|(talk)]] 11:24, 1 January 2010 (UTC)
::The links can be piped, so that doesn't really matter. So in American English, do you not have this distinction "on Friday" (=next/last Friday) vs. "on a Friday" (=some Friday)? What would "on a Friday" mean to you?--[[User:Kotniski|Kotniski]] ([[User talk:Kotniski|talk]]) 11:35, 1 January 2010 (UTC)
:::It's subtle, but how do you phrase "Christmas comes on Friday this year"? That's the way we say it, not "on a Friday", even in quasi-formal speech and writing. — [[User:Arthur Rubin|Arthur Rubin]] [[User talk:Arthur Rubin|(talk)]] 16:27, 1 January 2010 (UTC)
::::Yes, that doesn't sound so bad (don't know why), though I wouldn't see anything ''wrong'' with "on a Friday" there either. The form with "a" still sounds better to me in the phrase we were talking about, though. I guess it's a UK v. US thing (or just personal preference).--[[User:Kotniski|Kotniski]] ([[User talk:Kotniski|talk]]) 19:23, 1 January 2010 (UTC)

So should the lead article for 2010 be:

'''2010''' ('''[[Roman numerals|MMX]]''') is a [[common year starting on Friday]], in accordance with the [[Gregorian calendar]], and is the current year...

We could go back to "common year starting on [day]" format, instead of "common year that started on a [day]".

[[Special:Contributions/64.106.112.241|64.106.112.241]] ([[User talk:64.106.112.241|talk]]) 03:10, 3 February 2010 (UTC)

== Centuries, Milennia, and Decades ==

I don't think there's any reason to say which year of a century, millennium, or decade a particular year is, unless it's the first or last year of a millennium, century, and decade. So I think the lead paragraph in 2010 should be:

'''2010''' ('''[[Roman numerals|MMX]]''') is a [[common year starting on Friday]], in accordance with the [[Gregorian calendar]], and is the current year. It is the 2010th year in the [[Anno Domini]]/[[Common Era]], and it is also the first year of the [[2010s]] decade.

Adding the information on which year of a century, millennium, and decade, can really confuse readers even more than saying "2010th year in the AD/CE.

[[Special:Contributions/64.106.112.241|64.106.112.241]] ([[User talk:64.106.112.241|talk]]) 03:08, 3 February 2010 (UTC)

:Agreed, except I'd leave out any reference to the decade as well. {{#if:DerbyCountyinNZ|<span style="background-color:red;color:lime;">DerbyCountyinNZ</span>|<span style="color:lime;">red</span>}} <sup> ([[User talk:DerbyCountyinNZ|Talk]] [[Special:Contributions/DerbyCountyinNZ|Contribs]])</sup> 07:08, 3 February 2010 (UTC)

::Edits have recently been made to the lead paragraph in almost all of the years 1989 through 2014 (and possibly many others), which includes a statement along the following lines:
:::2010 is "the 10th year of the 3rd millennium and of the 21st century; and the 1st of the 2010s decade."
::Apart from the fact that these changes appear to have been made without any prior discussion, technically many would regard them as incorrect, taking the view that the 3rd millennium and 21st century commenced on 1 January 2001. I proposed that these amendments be reversed and that the text return to as suggested in the opening comment of this section, possibly omitting the reference to decade. [[User:Davshul|Davshul]] ([[User talk:Davshul|talk]]) 18:33, 3 February 2010 (UTC)
:::There was some prior discussion about two section up. Still, I can't say there was a clear consensus. Nonetheless, your followup comment is wrong, in that it '''is''' clear that the 3rd millennium and 21st century commenced on 1 January 2001. — [[User:Arthur Rubin|Arthur Rubin]] [[User talk:Arthur Rubin|(talk)]] 18:37, 3 February 2010 (UTC)
::::I had not noticed he earlier discussion. However, apart frrom the User suggesting the then proposed new format for 2010, all other comments (in both the present and earlier discussions) were again such change. As noted by me, and more strongly stated Arthur Rubin (with whom I agree), the references to the milleneum and century are incorrect. So where does this leave us? [[User:Davshul|Davshul]] ([[User talk:Davshul|talk]]) 19:02, 3 February 2010 (UTC)

:::::I do not think the existing text confuses the reader. I would not change the substance of the text except to fix a couple of punctuations issues as indicated below.
::::::'''2010''' ('''[[Roman numerals|MMX]]''') is the current year and is a [[common year starting on Friday|common year that started on a Friday]]. In the [[Gregorian calendar]] it is the 2010th year of the [[Common Era]] and of [[Anno Domini]]; the 10th year of the [[3rd millennium]] and of the [[21st century]]; and the 1st of the [[2010s|2010s decade]].
::::: For earlier years I would change it to the following:
::::::'''2009''' ('''[[Roman numerals|MMX]]''') was a [[common year starting on Thursday|common year that started on a Thursday]]. In the [[Gregorian calendar]] it is the 2009th year of the [[Common Era]] and of [[Anno Domini]]; the 9th year of the [[3rd millennium]] and of the [[21st century]]; and the 10st of the [[2000s|2000s decade]].

:::::I would not change the "is" to "was" in the second sentence - regardless of the date the statement ii still true. Changing it ""was" implies it is no longer the 9th year of the 3rd millennium. etc. [[User:Ttonyb1|<span style="font-weight:bold; color:blue; text-shadow:grey 0.4em 0.4em 0.5em; letter-spacing: 2px; padding: 1px 3px;"> <i>ttonyb</i></span>]] ([[User talk:Ttonyb1#top|talk]]) 20:18, 3 February 2010 (UTC)

In my opinion, I don't think we should state which year of a millennium, decade, or century a particular year is, unless it's the first or last year of a decade, century, or millennium. Maybe we could state which year of a millennium and century a certain year is, but leave out the decade info unless it's the first or last year of a particular decade.

'''2010''' ('''[[Roman numerals|MMX]]''') is a [[common year starting on Friday|common year that started on a Friday]], in accordance with the [[Gregorian calendar]], and it is the current year. It is also the 2010th year in the [[Anno Domini]]/[[Common Era]], the 10th year in the [[3rd millennium]] and [[21st century]], and the 1st of the [[2010s]].

[[User:Continental738|Continental738]] ([[User talk:Continental738|talk]]) 00:39, 4 February 2010 (UTC)

:My prefernce would be to leave out the decades altogether and only mention the century or millenium if is the first or last year. So, ignoring corrections for day of week, and using "is" rather "was" (not sure which I prefer):

'''1900''' ('''[[Roman numerals|MMX]]''') is a [[common year starting on Friday|common year that started on a Friday]], in accordance with the [[Gregorian calendar]]. It is the 1900th year in the [[Anno Domini]]/[[Common Era]] and 100th and last year of the [[19th century]].

'''1901''' ('''[[Roman numerals|MMX]]''') is a [[common year starting on Friday|common year that started on a Friday]], in accordance with the [[Gregorian calendar]]. It is the 1901st year in the [[Anno Domini]]/[[Common Era]] and 1st year of the [[20th century]].

'''2000''' ('''[[Roman numerals|MMX]]''') is a [[leap year starting on Friday|leap year that started on a Friday]], in accordance with the [[Gregorian calendar]]. It is the 2000th year in the [[Anno Domini]]/[[Common Era]], the 1000th and last year of the [[2nd millenium]] and the 100th and last year of the [[20th century]].

'''2001''' ('''[[Roman numerals|MMX]]''') is a [[common year starting on Friday|common year that started on a Friday]], in accordance with the [[Gregorian calendar]]. It is the 2001st year in the [[Anno Domini]]/[[Common Era]] and the 1st year of the [[3rd millenium]] and the [[21st century]].

'''2010''' ('''[[Roman numerals|MMX]]''') is a [[common year starting on Friday|common year that started on a Friday]], in accordance with the [[Gregorian calendar]]. It is the 2010th year in the [[Anno Domini]]/[[Common Era]].

The infobox at each Year article includes which millenium, century and decade the year falls into, there is no need for excessive repetition. Cheers, {{#if:DerbyCountyinNZ|<span style="background-color:red;color:lime;">DerbyCountyinNZ</span>|<span style="color:lime;">red</span>}} <sup> ([[User talk:DerbyCountyinNZ|Talk]] [[Special:Contributions/DerbyCountyinNZ|Contribs]])</sup> 01:26, 4 February 2010 (UTC)

:'''I agree''' with Derby's suggestion, except there is no need to go back to change the earlier years (1900; 1901), as these appear correct and text is amended slightly to make reference to the Julian calender, then still in use in certain countries. (It should be noted the days of the week mentioned in Derby's examples are incorrect, apart from 2010, and that we should add that that 2000 was "the first [[century leap year]] since [[1600]]".) [[User:Davshul|Davshul]] ([[User talk:Davshul|talk]]) 08:23, 4 February 2010 (UTC)

::I'm fine with any of Derby's suggestions, but I'd change one thing. There's a problem with the phrasing of "the [[Anno Domini]]/[[Common Era]]". This implies that AD is an "era" in the same sense that CE is an "era". But it isn't. Yes, both terms are ''associated'' with the exact same span of years, but they do not ''denote'' the same things. CE refers to the past 2010 years collectively. But AD is not an era at all; it designates years ''individually''. In the AD/BC system, AD is properly placed before each year, whereas BC is properly placed after the year. "In the year of our Lord 2010" makes grammatical sense, but "2010 in the year of our Lord" does not--2010, being a year, cannot be "in" some other year. "2010 BC" also makes grammatical sense: "2010 [years] before Christ". "BC 2010", in contrast, is grammatical nonsense: "Before Christ 2010". In a nutshell, AD refers to ''each'' year of the Common Era, and CE refers to ''all'' years that, individually, can be prefixed by AD; there is no "in the year of our Lord era" ("anno"--think "annual"--strictly indicates a year, not an era). So I'd suggest something like the following: "It is the 2010th year in the [[Common Era]] and is the 2010th year [[Anno Domini]]", or "Often regarded as the 2010th year [[Anno Domini]], it is also the 2010th year of the [[Common Era]]", or "It is the 2010th year to receive the [[Common Year]] and [[Anno Domini]] designations", or whatever, really, just as long as it doesn't imply that a year ("''Anno'' Domini") and an era ("Common ''Era''") are the same thing. CE may be AD's secular sister, but she's not an identical twin. [[User:Cosmic Latte|Cosmic Latte]] ([[User talk:Cosmic Latte|talk]]) 20:50, 5 February 2010 (UTC)
:::Update: As no one has voiced disagreement with the above position, I've [http://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=Wikipedia:Recent_years&diff=358409020&oldid=355233582 edited] the guideline in accordance with that view, so that the phrasing makes a bit more sense. As far as I can tell, it's a rather minor edit (although probably not minor enough to mark as minor), but if anyone disagrees, feel free to revert/discuss. [[User:Cosmic Latte|Cosmic Latte]] ([[User talk:Cosmic Latte|talk]]) 14:17, 26 April 2010 (UTC)

=="Thursday of the Gregorian calendar" Format==

I don't know why this format has been put into effect in the first place but it makes no sense to begin a year article like this:

'''2010''' ('''[[Roman numerals|MMX]]''') is a [[common year starting on Friday]] of the [[Gregorian calendar]] and is the current year.

Does one year start on "Friday of the Gregorian calendar" and the following year starts on "Saturday of the Julian calendar"? It's not grammatically correct, so that's why I changed a few lead articles to say (e.g. 1970 (MCMLXX) was a common year starting on Friday in the Gregorian calendar). I Think it makes more sense to say "in the Gregorian calendar" as opposed to "of the Gregorian calendar". So 2010 could begin as follows:

'''2010''' ('''[[Roman numerals|MMX]]''') is a [[common year starting on Friday]] in the [[Gregorian calendar]] and is the current year. It is the 2010th year in the [[Common Era]] (or [[Anno Domini]]) and the first year of the [[2010s]] decade.

[[Special:Contributions/64.106.113.157|64.106.113.157]] ([[User talk:64.106.113.157|talk]]) 07:56, 27 February 2010 (UTC)

:You need to get consensus before making any such changes. {{#if:DerbyCountyinNZ|<span style="background-color:red;color:lime;">DerbyCountyinNZ</span>|<span style="color:lime;">red</span>}} <sup> ([[User talk:DerbyCountyinNZ|Talk]] [[Special:Contributions/DerbyCountyinNZ|Contribs]])</sup> 09:21, 27 February 2010 (UTC)

One person on Wikipedia claims that it can really confuse the reader when one mentions which year of a decade, millennium, and century a particular year is in, unless it's the first or last year of such time periods. So I wonder if the 2010 could be changed to this:

'''2010''' ('''[[Roman numerals|MMX]]''') is a [[common year starting on Friday|common year that started on a Friday]] in the [[Gregorian calendar]] and is the current year. It is also the 2010th year in the [[Common Era]], or of [[Anno Domini]]; and the 1st year of the [[2010s]] decade.

[[Special:Contributions/64.106.113.235|64.106.113.235]] ([[User talk:64.106.113.235|talk]]) 06:51, 4 March 2010 (UTC)

:As I mentioned before, I do not see an issue with mention of the year of a decade, millennium, and century of a particular year and suggest it not be changed. [[User:Ttonyb1|<span style="font-weight:bold; color:blue; text-shadow:grey 0.4em 0.4em 0.5em; letter-spacing: 2px; padding: 1px 3px;"> <i>ttonyb</i></span>]] ([[User talk:Ttonyb1#top|talk]]) 07:18, 4 March 2010 (UTC)

== Is this project still active? ==

Given the lack of any constructive input to my last prompt, I'm wondering if there are any users still interested in this project? {{#if:DerbyCountyinNZ|<span style="background-color:red;color:lime;">DerbyCountyinNZ</span>|<span style="color:lime;">red</span>}} <sup> ([[User talk:DerbyCountyinNZ|Talk]] [[Special:Contributions/DerbyCountyinNZ|Contribs]])</sup> 01:13, 7 June 2010 (UTC)

== Consensus is needed to decide if the opening paragraph should have an in-line citation pointing to a useful and valid reference. ==

At first I was confused by the opening paragraph of the 200x articles which states:
''In the Gregorian calendar, it was the 200xth year of the Common Era or of Anno Domini; the xth year of the 3rd millennium and of the 21st century; and the x+1 year of the 2000s.''

So like a good editor should, I researched this topic and found the following reliable reference [http://www.nmm.ac.uk/explore/astronomy-and-time/time-facts/the-new-millennium#21stC] to verify that the Gregorian calendar had no year “zero”, and thus the above sentence is factually accurate. To help the article, I added that useful and valid reference as an in-line citation. Almost immediately I find that my edits are being reversed, and that when I put back the reference [[User:Ttonyb1]] tells me on my [[User talk:Mantes]] page that I will be in violation of WP:3RR unless I capitulate to his removal of the valid and useful reference that I added.

So I am bringing the issue to this talk page in the hope that a consensus of editors will be reached on the issue of ''whether or not the opening paragraph should have an in-line citation pointing to a useful and valid reference''. I believe that a verifiable in-line citation for such a controversial/misunderstood fact will assist everyone who reads this article to understand and accept why 2001 was the 1st (and not the 2nd) year of the new millennium. I do not understand why any editor would actively choose to ''not'' reference this fact and, even more so, actively pressure another editor to not reference that fact.

Although I think that [[User:Ttonyb1]] should have opened this discussion (instead he chose to edit war), I am bringing the issue here. I have made my opinion clear that I believe that the article will be better if it is properly referenced, so there is no need for me to take further part in this discussion. Editors who are more senior that I are better equipped to make the arguments for or against references. I will be watching, but will not participate. Thank you for the thoughtful discussion that I anticipate will follow. [[User:Mantes|Mantes]] ([[User talk:Mantes|talk]]) 20:32, 21 July 2010 (UTC)

:In my opinion, it's a bit pointless to include this reference in each and everyone of the 200x articles, as these are just lists of events, births, deaths, etc. There already is an article about the [[0 (year)]], which is well-equipped with references. [[User:Favonian|Favonian]] ([[User talk:Favonian|talk]]) 20:53, 21 July 2010 (UTC)

::If there were no other references in any of these articles (like the [[WP:DOY]] articles), I would argue that this reference should be excluded so long as the statement includes a link to an article that has the sourced information. But since these articles do have some references, it's hard to argue that there shouldn't be any. My preference would be that all these articles have no references. Reason being that they are lists and there tend to be a lot of entries, and there is a factor of notability that is solved by linking to an article that establishes the notability. With refs the lists would become quite a mess because every single line would need a ref. -- <font color="#000080">Mufka</font> [[User:Mufka|<sup>(u)</sup>]] [[User talk:Mufka|<sup>(t)</sup>]] [[Special:Contributions/Mufka|<sup>(c)</sup>]] 21:29, 21 July 2010 (UTC)

:::<sigh> As I have indicated , it is not needed. </sigh> [[User:Ttonyb1|<span style="font-weight:bold; color:blue; text-shadow:grey 0.4em 0.4em 0.5em; letter-spacing: 2px; padding: 1px 3px;"> <i>ttonyb</i></span>]] ([[User talk:Ttonyb1#top|talk]]) 21:46, 21 July 2010 (UTC)

:Adding the same citation to dozens of pages just to prove a point is hardly constructive, especially when there is no consensus for change. The place to discuss such a change is here, as has been pointed out. As the change has been disputed and until there is consensus to accept the change any attempts to make such a change would be considerd edit-warring and might lead t oa 3RR violation. I see no point in adding a citation about the Gregorian claendar to every year, what a waste of time! The citation need only to be in the [[Gregorian calendar]] article which is referenced in every year anyway. Personally I find the lede of year articles overly trivial; anyone with a basic grasp of numeracy should be able to work out which year of a decade, century or millenium a particular year is and it's even more obvious given the top infobox! <span style="background-color:red;color:lime;">DerbyCountyinNZ</span> <sup> ([[User talk:DerbyCountyinNZ|Talk]] [[Special:Contributions/DerbyCountyinNZ|Contribs]])</sup> 09:25, 22 July 2010 (UTC)

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RFC: International notability - All sections

There is no consensus to implement this proposal.

Cunard (talk) 02:04, 19 November 2017 (UTC)

The following discussion is closed. Please do not modify it. Subsequent comments should be made on the appropriate discussion page. No further edits should be made to this discussion.

I know there is another RFC still open but it does not seem to be going anywhere meaningful. I propose to replace the section "Inclusion and exclusion criteria" with the following:

  • "Recent years pages are intended to provide an overview of events of international and lasting notability that occur during that year:
  • In general, events meeting this criterion should recieve significant independent news reporting from at least three continents or should recieve coverage by multiple reliable sources as one of the most significant global events to have occured during that year. (For example in a year in review article in a major newspaper).
  • Births or Deaths which recieve significant independent news reporting from three continents or recieve coverage by multiple reliable sources as one of the most important global events to have occured during that year are included in this criterion.
  • Some categories of reccuring events often recieve significant international coverage but are still not usually of lasting notability. We have special additional rules to deal with these categories. If such events recieve coverage by multiple reliable sources as one of the most significant global events to have occured during that year this may be evidence that they are of unusual importance and should be included.

Then, we would retain the other sub-sections - with the exception of the three continent rule, births and deaths which would be subsumed above.

I think that this change would improve the balance of recent years articles. Dramatically reduce squabbling over dumb things and give a more balanced overall picture. There might be a lag with a few things until reliable sources start to round up a year but I think that is emmiently preferable to the current arbitrary standards which manage to be both too flexible (to allow random dead musicians and athletes who happen to be WP:BIAS beneficiaries) and too inflexible (not allowing election of Donald Trump on 2016 even though we can now clearly see it was one of the most significant events of the year.)

I am not a wiki policy wonk and I am sure there are some flaws in what i have put above, but we can correct small things later. I hope this would be a positive change that would fix a lot of the big issues we nearly all seem to acknowledge. AlasdairEdits (talk) 19:09, 15 September 2017 (UTC)[reply]

  • Oppose your proposal just gives more latitude to hidden rules and subversive "we don't do that" approaches, because something like "... significant independent news reporting ..." needs objective criteria to assess against. We need something concrete that can't be over-ruled by regulars who claim some kind of provenance, e.g. "the death is reported in at least two reliable sources in at least two continents". As for events, similar applies. The Rambling Man (talk) 19:14, 15 September 2017 (UTC)[reply]
    PS, the other RFC is perfectly meaningful, it's enabling a much wider audience to comment on the current situation and therefore hopefully bringing more views to the next phase: the solution. The Rambling Man (talk) 19:15, 15 September 2017 (UTC)[reply]
    I think editors understand words like significant, independent and reliable - these are concepts that are enshrined within wikipedia that we have to deal with every day, they are not totally objective of course but they are also not at all arbitrary. This is my attempt at a solution. I am trying to strike a balance between now and "just an article of links to other X in RY articles" neither of which serve our readers. AlasdairEdits (talk) 19:24, 15 September 2017 (UTC)[reply]
    I know what you're trying to do, it fails, but it's good to make a effort. My approach was to gather together as many interested individuals as possible and then get a brainstorm on how to fix it all up. To each their own. The Rambling Man (talk) 19:31, 15 September 2017 (UTC)[reply]
  • Support. This resembles one of my suggestioms above. It would be constructive even if the other active RfC were constructive. (NOTE: I'm not saying the other RfC was not intended to be constructive, just that it could not be constructive.) I think "significant" coverage is good phrasing. — Arthur Rubin (talk) 03:34, 16 September 2017 (UTC)[reply]
  • Ironic, isn't it, that the other RFC is getting so much discussion and support in favour of finding an alternative solution. It's done exactly what it intended to do, i.e. get many more eyes on the problem rather than just the regulars who keep stonewalling. This "one-size-fits-all" suggestion is well-intended, but not adequate. We need to work with the community to come up with more precisely and objectively defined criteria, not the current bizarre carnival of oddities that currently consitutes the essay for inclusion. The Rambling Man (talk) 06:39, 16 September 2017 (UTC)[reply]
That's enough, guys Ritchie333 (talk) (cont) 11:21, 19 September 2017 (UTC)[reply]
The following discussion has been closed. Please do not modify it.
  • This is a proposed alternative solution. Why are you opposed to any proposed solutions? — Arthur Rubin (talk) 08:01, 16 September 2017 (UTC)[reply]
    I'm not opposed to "any" proposed solution, that's a lie. I'm opposed to this proposal. Please don't make false assertions yet again. The Rambling Man (talk) 08:11, 16 September 2017 (UTC)[reply]
    You have opposed all proposed solutions or specific changes (and most insufficiently specfic changes) which have been presented other than by yourself. — Arthur Rubin (talk) 15:20, 16 September 2017 (UTC)[reply]
    Arthur, are we going to have to bring this up at Arbcom? Diffs that prove I have "opposed all proposed solutions or specific changes " right now or a redaction and retraction of your accusation is needed. The Rambling Man (talk) 18:33, 16 September 2017 (UTC)[reply]
    It's impossible very difficult to prove a negative. However, if there is a specific proposal at WT:RY, other than those you proposed, which you did not oppose, and you can provide a diff, I'll admit my error. I can provide many diffs where you opposed proposals, but it wouldn't prove anything. — Arthur Rubin (talk) 04:34, 17 September 2017 (UTC)[reply]
    It would be impossible to demonstrate in the space available. I would have to list each formal proposal (and I could not prove I caught all of them), and point to one of your diffs opposing each one. If you believe the statement to be false, you could easily point to a specific proposal which you did not oppose; it would be easy enough for me to verify you didn't oppose the proposal, although I obviously couldn't provide proof.
    Before you bring up the proposal to eliminate the #Deaths sections from RY articles, you made the proposal before it was formally asked as a question requesting response, so it doesn't count as a proposal you didn't make. — Arthur Rubin (talk) 05:08, 17 September 2017 (UTC)[reply]
    Rubin, you don't have many options here, either provide diffs that support your unsubstantiated claim or remove the claim. You're already about to be desyssoped for making false and unsubstantiated claims, continued abuse like this will result in you being blocked. I'm sure you don't want that. The Rambling Man (talk) 07:29, 17 September 2017 (UTC)[reply]
    Arthur Rubin I'm still waiting for those diffs. The onus is absolutely 100% on you to prove your assertion. You know that, or at least you should know that as you are currently still an admin and that kind of thing is like Admin 101. You can't just level an unfounded accusation at someone and then state they need to defend it. I'm sure you don't want to be blocked, but continuing to edit like this will ultimately result in you being banned from Wikipedia. If you don't redact your latest unfounded accusations, I'll ask Arbcom to add it to the ongoing case as further evidence that not only can you not be trusted with the admin tools, but you can't be trusted here at all. The Rambling Man (talk) 20:56, 18 September 2017 (UTC)[reply]
    Obviously, I can provide diffs that you have opposed many proposals; but diffs are not necessary – the presence of your "Oppose" !vote is sufficient evidence. Diffs would be insufficient to prove my statement, as I might have missed a proposal. The onus is on you to point to a proposal, which was not originally made by you, which you failed to oppose. — Arthur Rubin (talk) 22:54, 18 September 2017 (UTC)[reply]
    Please stop making unfounded accusations about me. I won't ask again, I will simply report you to Arbcom for each and every single infraction where you make an accusation and then refuse to back it up without any evidence whatsoever. The presence of my oppose vote here does not equate to your claim that I am "opposed to any proposed solutions". That is a pure lie and you need to redact it. The Rambling Man (talk) 06:41, 19 September 2017 (UTC)[reply]

How about deaths of (former) heads of state/government? Many of them aren't widely reported by the media. Jim Michael (talk) 22:11, 16 September 2017 (UTC)[reply]

Deaths of individual of international and lasting significance like Nelson Mandela or Fidel Castro they are. minor heads of state of random small nations not so much. I don't propose to keep any special categories for inclusionAlasdairEdits (talk) 06:30, 17 September 2017 (UTC)[reply]
Where would you draw the line in regard to heads of state/government? Jim Michael (talk) 18:52, 17 September 2017 (UTC)[reply]
Just don't draw any line, to do so encourages systemic bias. The Rambling Man (talk) 19:23, 17 September 2017 (UTC)[reply]
How would we decide which (former) heads of state should be included and which should not? The guide of including all of them made sense - a leader of a nation is by definition of significant international notability. To include some but not others will be deemed as bias towards some parts of the world and bias against others. Jim Michael (talk) 19:41, 17 September 2017 (UTC)[reply]
Include them all. ITNR has a good stab at this. Then there is no bias, simply reporting everyone. It's very simple. The Rambling Man (talk) 20:15, 17 September 2017 (UTC)[reply]
ITN doesn't include all or nearly all of them. We have been including them all on RY articles for years - so we agree on the matter of including all (former) heads of state/government. Jim Michael (talk) 22:53, 17 September 2017 (UTC)[reply]
Only because ITN insists on a minimum quality threshold and no BLP violations, unlike this project. The Rambling Man (talk) 05:54, 18 September 2017 (UTC)[reply]
Putting dead people under BLP rules is factually wrong. Excluding internationally notable people from Year articles - just because their articles don't meet a particular standard - would mean that some of the most notable people would be missing. That doesn't help anyone. Jim Michael (talk) 13:20, 18 September 2017 (UTC)[reply]
I think you may need to read WP:BLP Jim. You are factually wrong (again). And many individuals are missing from your cherry-picked list. That doesn't help anyone. The Rambling Man (talk) 13:23, 18 September 2017 (UTC)[reply]
It's not my personal list - it was formed by following RY criteria which had been written by the regulars over a period of years.
I'm not aware of any internationally notable people who died this year who are missing from 2017. Jim Michael (talk) 18:04, 18 September 2017 (UTC)[reply]
So redact your BLP violations, and of course you're not aware of any missing people because you have your own version of "internationally notable" which is not commensurate with the community. The Rambling Man (talk) 18:18, 18 September 2017 (UTC)[reply]
What BLP vios? I'm not responsible for vios of any kind which were added by other people to articles which I've linked to - whether on RY articles or elsewhere. As far as I'm aware, all of the people who have significant international notability and died this year are currently in this article. Jim Michael (talk) 23:25, 18 September 2017 (UTC)[reply]
The statements you yourself have made. The Rambling Man (talk) 06:38, 19 September 2017 (UTC)[reply]
  • Generally support. I think this proposal takes the best of the current policy while removing the worst of it. The key point is that the proposal frames international notability in terms of the coverage of the event as opposed to the event itself. An event can be "domestic" in nature while still being internationally notable, and I think that a number of those have gotten lost previously. I do still think it needs some fine-tuning. The biggest hole I see in the "three continent" rule is that it automatically creates a systemic bias because Australia is its own continent and is culturally similar to the US/Canada (North America) and the UK (Europe). I don't want to make a kind of rule where Australia doesn't "count," but I'm not sure how else to resolve the issue. agtx 15:30, 19 September 2017 (UTC)[reply]
That's why the three-continent rule wasn't enough by itself to demonstrate international notability. It was merely one of the requirements. Jim Michael (talk) 19:13, 19 September 2017 (UTC)[reply]
Right, a requirement that the regulars on these pages invoked when it was something they wanted to have on the page and pooh-poohed when it wasn't. Consider such absurd discussions as this one on the Charlie Hebdo shooting and this one on the US same-sex marriage decision. Under the proposal above, both of these events would be listed in the article (as I think is proper, and as Charlie Hebdo eventually was). I agree that there is no need for a bright-line rule here, but I think that reference to coverage in reliable sources is way better than discussions about "international impact" without citation to any sources. agtx 15:27, 20 September 2017 (UTC)[reply]
  • Comment – This is a really good start. The biggest problem we currently have is determining what is and what is not "internationally significant". I don't think this proposal adequately addresses that problem, but it is better than our current system. I particularly like the addition regarding reliable sources assessing events as the most significant events of the year, although that does have the potential to create a system where the page is relatively bare for most of the year with a flurry of additions at the end of the year/beginning of the following year. I don't like the emphasis on the coverage of deaths; I think the emphasis should be on the person, not their death. Someone's death could go relatively unnoticed when their life was very significant. But I don't think the converse is true: if someone's death does receive the requisite coverage, then that does some indicative of significance. -- Irn (talk) 00:15, 20 September 2017 (UTC)[reply]
Yes - someone can have a long, successful career but their death still receives little attention. That's the case with most of the important scientists (because most people aren't interested in them) and with many sportspeople who retired many years before their deaths and vanished from the public eye. It can even be the case with entertainers - for example, Lauren Bacall's death received little media coverage. However, it's not true to say that a high-profile death proves (s)he had an internationally (or even nationally) important career. A death can receive a large amount of coverage due to there being legal action, campaigning etc. involved (such as Terri Schiavo and Charlie Gard) - or due having been the victim of a high-profile murder (such as Rachel Nickell). Jim Michael (talk) 14:06, 20 September 2017 (UTC)[reply]
You're right, and I agree with everything you wrote in that comment. I apologize for the apparent contradiction in my comment as a result of not expressing myself clearly. While I think the focus should be on the person's life, I also think that people whose deaths were notable internationally ought to be considered as well. (Neither Rachel Nickell, Terri Schiavo, nor Charlie Gard has their own article, so those aren't the best examples. I was thinking someone more along the lines of Berta Cáceres.) I expect you to still disagree with that, and I don't hope to convince you otherwise. I just wanted to make sure I was expressing myself clearly. -- Irn (talk) 18:41, 20 September 2017 (UTC)[reply]
Caceres was little-known outside her country during her lifetime. The circumstances of her death is the main thing that brought media coverage of her. This often happens with victims of murder who were of fairly low notability during their lifetimes, such as Sharon Tate and Rebecca Schaeffer. Jim Michael (talk) 21:00, 20 September 2017 (UTC)[reply]
Right. If those deaths received the requisite coverage, then that would seem indicative of significance to me, but not to you. Like I said, I expect you to disagree with me, and I don't hope to convince you otherwise. -- Irn (talk) 01:11, 21 September 2017 (UTC)[reply]
  • Comment Couldn't we find one or more reliable, international sources which provide annual reviews including obituaries, where they have already identified notability, and use these sources as the determiner? Example: say the BBC, Guardian, New York Times, Reuters, and Sky have such articles, if individual X appears in 3 of those 5, they are deemed internationally notable? 62.255.118.6 (talk) 15:28, 21 September 2017 (UTC)[reply]
    • Yes! That's what I've been mentioning for months now. Except perhaps a non-Western one or two would be useful to avoid bias and the problem is that we can't use them for the current year. But a good idea about the subsetting, if the requirement that the individual notice to appear in all of them proves to be too harsh. — Yerpo Eh? 16:52, 21 September 2017 (UTC)[reply]
Sure; if we are seeking to define international notability it would be good to include a non-western source in the list of annual review publications. But essentially, if the source is international, then their selection by default would be international too. I think it's good to be inclusive but it's also worth remembering that this is the English Wikipedia, at to some extent it is to be expected to carry some bias towards the nationality of its audience and editors, according to what sources we can find, translate and understand. 62.255.118.6 (talk) 10:44, 22 September 2017 (UTC)[reply]
  • Oppose the solution for the events. Sorry, but the key requirement is too vague - what is "lasting" notability and how do you prove it if editors disagree? For this reason, I think that this proposal is not a significant improvement over the existing system. — Yerpo Eh? 18:12, 21 September 2017 (UTC)[reply]
  • Oppose This is far too woolly, and I'm more in favour of what has been discussed a few comments up with Yerpo - using annual review articles from reliable international sources to establish evidence of international notability; i.e. if the individual is notable enough to be included in 1/2/3/4/5 other annual review articles (from the BBC, Guardian, New York Times or whichever publications are decided to be internationally representative), then they are good enough to be included here. Simple, logical and nonsubjective. 62.255.118.6 (talk) 10:52, 22 September 2017 (UTC)[reply]
What do we do during the current year? agtx 13:10, 22 September 2017 (UTC)[reply]
We can use one of the other options, such as three-continent obituaries, then cleanup after the lists are published. — Yerpo Eh? 20:01, 22 September 2017 (UTC)[reply]
Assume you mean news articles rather than obits (since we're talking about events). I think the "year in review" type pieces should be considered a preferred source for RY articles. That's a reliable source saying "here's the most important things that happened this year," which is exactly what we're looking for. I'm not convinced it should be a requirement, but it's a good indication that something should be on the page. agtx 21:39, 22 September 2017 (UTC)[reply]
Support proposal by agtx: follow RS to compile the most influential events of each year. We could break it down by categories, using a couple sources for science, a couple others for politics, some more for entertainment, etc. — JFG talk 02:43, 23 September 2017 (UTC)[reply]
Actually, I was talking about obituaries for compiling the deaths section. As for events, we could use the same approach, of course, but I'm not sure yet what to do in the current year, because the three continent rule hasn't proven to be an effective filter. — Yerpo Eh? 05:18, 23 September 2017 (UTC)[reply]
Do we have to have anything for current year? Yerpo, earlier you were championing the inclusion of cherry-picked deaths in RY articles "because its what others do". Well, if others DON'T do current year annual reviews until the end of the year, why don't we follow suit? That leaves the current year either blank, or a set of links to all encyclopaedic-worthy deaths/events. We then correlate that list, 'cherry pick' according to criteria (ie. presence in alternative obit/annual review articles) and produce our own finished annual review article just as everyone else does. Without needing weird rules fraudulently promoted to guideline status by those currently lacking credibility. 62.255.118.6 (talk) 12:15, 3 October 2017 (UTC)[reply]
We do need a list of deaths on 2017, because many people view it each day. Many organisations have lists of notable people who've died this year so far. Jim Michael (talk) 01:29, 4 October 2017 (UTC)[reply]
many people view it each day - Links please. Many organisations have lists of notable people who've died this year so far. - Links please. 62.255.118.6 (talk) 12:54, 4 October 2017 (UTC)[reply]
@Jim Michael: - Jim: many people view it each day - Links please. Many organisations have lists of notable people who've died this year so far. - Links please. You've been editing so you are aware of my request. If you don't have the evidence to back up your claims, no problem - simply strike them from the record. 62.255.118.6 (talk) 10:14, 6 October 2017 (UTC)[reply]
Go to WP:Pageview statistics, where you can search whichever timeframe you like, which will show you that this article receives thousands of views per day. Examples of RS which have published lists of deaths so far this year include the Daily Express People who died in 2017 and CNN People we've lost in 2017. Jim Michael (talk) 10:43, 6 October 2017 (UTC)[reply]
Well that's great news, if we can find Reliable Sources such as these which cherry-pick in real time rather than end of year, the objection to the Annual Review/obit Reliable Source method in terms of making Current Year articles untenable, is completely overturned, wouldn't you agree? 62.255.118.6 (talk) 13:35, 6 October 2017 (UTC)[reply]
The problem is which sources to use. Even if we exclude tabloid sources, they will still be entertainer-centric, Americentric etc. Jim Michael (talk) 01:24, 7 October 2017 (UTC)[reply]
Come on man, work with me here. For one, you can't just dismiss every RS as entertainer-centric. For two, this is Wikipedia. We aren't trying to outdo every other information source out there. If its good enough for Time magazine, or Forbes, or Reuters, or The Guardian, or the BBC, or Al Jazera, or Sky, or the New York Times etc etc. For three, a list slightly biased though its aggregation of a set of proffesional, international media group obits/annual reviews, is far far far far far superior to what you are fighting so desperately to uphold - a list biased by you and a weird, proves-nothing, principle breaching 9Wiki rule. You want to stick with something because its the best option available? Then let go of the 9wiki, cos best it certainly isn't. 62.255.118.6 (talk) 12:54, 12 October 2017 (UTC)[reply]

Oppose for several of the above reasons. This page is not a guideline, so it shouldn't be trying to make "rules" any longer anyway. There's a germ of truth in the proposal, and a compressed version of it would probably be useful as broad advice. Take the tactic used by subject-specific notability guidelines, and address this a probability matter: "An addition to a year article is more likely to be accepted by consensus, if it has one or more of the following going for it: [bullet list here]".  — SMcCandlish ¢ >ʌⱷ҅ʌ<  06:10, 16 October 2017 (UTC)[reply]


The discussion above is closed. Please do not modify it. Subsequent comments should be made on the appropriate discussion page. No further edits should be made to this discussion.

RFC: Do we need to differentiate between "recent years" and other years?

The following discussion is closed. Please do not modify it. Subsequent comments should be made on the appropriate discussion page. No further edits should be made to this discussion.


The WP:RY "sub-project" (of WP:YEARS) mandates a unique set of inclusion criteria for years 2002 onwards. These criteria are not applied to years prior to 2002. Do we need to apply different inclusion criteria to year articles? Does our readership understand the reason for such differences in articles between 2001 and 2002? Or should our readers expect consistent formats across all year articles? The Rambling Man (talk) 20:24, 15 October 2017 (UTC)[reply]

  • Is there an actual problem to address? I get the feeling that we don't bother with stricter inclusion criteria on older year articles due to reduced tendency to add trivia to them. I'm not sure why 2002 in particular was picked. Is it just a 15-year boundary that migrates as time goes on, or set permanently at 2002? (Never mind; discussions above answer this.)  — SMcCandlish ¢ >ʌⱷ҅ʌ<  05:40, 16 October 2017 (UTC), rev'd. 05:47, 16 October 2017 (UTC)[reply]

    I support the notion in a thread above to set the mark at 20 years (approx. 1 generation), which as JFG says is generally time enough for something to have transitioned from news to history and thus for its lasting importance to be more certain. However, this page is not a guideline, so anything it says should be framed as general advice, about the kind of list addition that is likely or not likely to be accepted. We can't actually impose any rule here.  — SMcCandlish ¢ >ʌⱷ҅ʌ<  06:16, 16 October 2017 (UTC)[reply]

    Yes, as noted, why should our readers inherently understand that articles from 2001 backward have different inclusion criteria from 2002 onward? How does this approach help our readers? The Rambling Man (talk) 06:33, 16 October 2017 (UTC)[reply]
    Discussion above indicates this date was chosen based on when WP started, and has a connection to the apparently now-rejected "seven Wikipedias rule" (which would no longer actually be a rule even if it hadn't been rejected, since this is no longer a guideline). The 2002 date is based on a string of assumptions that don't hold. It makes more sense to set this at 20 years or so, and have the boundary auto-update. Some might prefer 10 years. Regardless, this can be done with simple parser functions right in the page itself, so it auto-updates on its own. If the ultimate question is "should there be any difference between the 2017 and 1980 articles", I would say yes, for reasons JFG already outlined in two threads above, and which boil down the difference between well-analyzed history versus reactionarily-covered news. The closer in time to an event that seemingly secondary-source material about the event is, the more primary-source in nature that material really is.  — SMcCandlish ¢ >ʌⱷ҅ʌ<  06:42, 16 October 2017 (UTC)[reply]
    I'm not sure you're answering the question, why should a reader expect to see a difference between 2001 and 2002 articles? And when this "recent" window expires on an article, as the inclusion criteria no longer applies, we would expect to see a load of edits... The Rambling Man (talk) 06:44, 16 October 2017 (UTC)[reply]
Part of the ambiguity appears to be rooted in an underlying assumption that has not been demonstrated. The original author and some other prominent editors appear to have believed that a RY guideline, and its admittedly arbitrary time cut-offs, are necessary to prevent the mass additions of spurious and frivolous entries into the 2002+ articles. This "assumes facts not in evidence," to use the legal phrase. The hypothesis that this essay guideline essay reduced the number of entries that had to be reverted after 2010 should be testable. I haven't seen that evidence brought forward in recent discussions here, or in the original discussions surrounding the creation of this piece. In the absence of evidence of those problems, having any time cut-off seems needlessly arbitrary. The lede could just as easily say: "Recent year articles are among the most heavily edited..." and be done with it. Eggishorn (talk) (contrib) 16:38, 17 October 2017 (UTC)[reply]
"most edited" is actually factually inaccurate... The Rambling Man (talk) 16:40, 17 October 2017 (UTC)[reply]
Would "...among the most-viewed..." be accurate? Eggishorn (talk) (contrib) 16:46, 17 October 2017 (UTC)[reply]
No. The Rambling Man (talk) 16:50, 17 October 2017 (UTC)[reply]
In that case, then there's no reason for the sentence to exist at all. There may not even be a reason for the essay to exist if there's no evidence of large-scale disruption and if the pages are not among the most edited or most viewed. Eggishorn (talk) (contrib) 17:06, 17 October 2017 (UTC)[reply]
Exactly. The Rambling Man (talk) 17:09, 17 October 2017 (UTC)[reply]
  • No. We do not need a differentiation. It's an attempted 'fix' for a problem that doesn't exist, and just convolutes our records and confuses our readers. Bin it. 62.255.118.6 (talk) 11:18, 18 October 2017 (UTC)[reply]
  • No. We should use the same inclusion criteria for all years, regardless of recency. Events/births/deaths of international importance as supported by reliable sources should be included. WP:YEARS is an appropriate place to centralize that effort, not this essay. The arguments I've seen to the contrary largely involve concerns about the growth of Wikipedia and of the internet, but I fail to see how that problem is unique to a handful of year pages. All this recent years business has gotten us is WP:OWN behavior and poor guidelines. agtx 05:37, 19 October 2017 (UTC)[reply]
In that case, we would need a guideline for what is eligible for inclusion in any year article, whether it be in the distant past, the recent past, the present or the future. Jim Michael (talk) 13:26, 20 October 2017 (UTC)[reply]
I thought we already had such guidelines for the entire project. What's so special about any year article, recent, ancient, or otherwise? That said, such standards are already in place. Eggishorn (talk) (contrib) 14:55, 20 October 2017 (UTC)[reply]
We don't have guidelines for what should or should not be in Year articles, but we need them. Jim Michael (talk) 18:38, 20 October 2017 (UTC)[reply]
"...but we need them," um, why? Please provide some concrete evidence that year articles, especially recent ones, have created an actual (as opposed to perceived) problem to support this necessity. Eggishorn (talk) (contrib) 18:46, 20 October 2017 (UTC)[reply]
The evidence is that, prior to the implementation of the RY guideline, the articles in question were flooded with insufficiently notable events and deaths. Jim Michael (talk) 15:35, 21 October 2017 (UTC)[reply]

Yeah, that's extremely unconvincing to me. The attempts to curate these pages have largely failed. The recent years articles are not particularly useful right now. agtx 02:48, 22 October 2017 (UTC)[reply]

  • Yes - The growth of Wikipedia and the internet are relevant because we now have far more information compiled across Wikipedia with each passing year. I think everyone is aware of WP:RECENTISM, but I don't think everyone quite sees how that affects these articles. To try to break it down, for the year 1517, we can easily list every single person we have an article for who died in that year in the 1517 article itself. For 2017, we simply can't – the article would just get too long. The same applies to events. Consequently, we need to have a different standard for the events, births, and deaths of 2017 than we do for 1517. 2002 is an arbitrarily chosen year where this line has been drawn. If we look at the amount of information available and the number of biographical articles and articles on events, it makes sense to go with somewhere near 2001 or 2002 because that coincides with the birth of Wikipedia and the explosion of the internet, because as things happen, they are added to the encyclopedia. -- irn (talk) 15:20, 20 October 2017 (UTC)[reply]
Edit conflictThis argument still pre-supposes that there is a problem with these articles being made "too long" and does not show any evidence of such a problem. To pick some examples at a random set of ten-year intervals, 1978 is 87,993bytes and has been viewed 7,954 times in the last 30 days, 1988 is 97,555bytes and has been viewed 12,943 times in the last 30 days, 1998 is 65,047bytes and has been viewed 15,152 times in the last 30 days while 2008 is 42,027bytes and has been viewed 13,267 times in the last 30 days. That sample, at least, shows that post-2002 articles are shorter and there is no relationship between length of the page and whether readers are likely to use the page. There is no evidence that the essay provides any necessary selectivity. Eggishorn (talk) (contrib) 15:51, 20 October 2017 (UTC)[reply]
I don't think I understand your point. You ask for proof that the pages have gotten too long, but RY has effectively prevented that, so it's impossible to prove. 2008 is shorter because of RY. The problem with page length isn't about how many visits a particular article may receive, but rather about readability and technical issues like load times. I readily concede that 2002 is arbitrary. Perhaps a better date would be 1990 (the invention of the World Wide Web) or 1950 (roughly the onset of the digital revolution) or even something like 1920 (to cover the lifespans of most people affected by the changes noted in my previous comment). (Regarding post-2002 articles being shorter than other year articles, I see that as a problem with the implementation/interpretation of RY and reason to change either the way it's written or interpreted, but I don't think that's reason to discard RY entirely.) -- irn (talk) 16:09, 20 October 2017 (UTC)[reply]
2008 is (was?, may be?, should have been?) covered by the essay but is a year that pre-dates the creation of the essay. If the hypothesis that this essay is necessary to prevent issues for readers is true, it should either show evidence of such a length so as to cause those problems you mention or show evidence that large post-2010 deletions were necessary and justified by the essay to remove such problems. As shown above, the length is obviously not a problem in comparison to other year articles not covered by the policy and the edit history of the page does not show any such large efforts were undertaken to bring it in line with the essay. In other words, this sample at least does not support the hypothesis that is basal to the need for this essay and I have seen no-one providing any positive evidence for the hypothesis. In the absence of such evidence, we should consider the hypothesis unproven and the essay not needed.
tl;dr version: We don't have any reason to believe that such readability issues exist or that the essay solves any concrete problem. Eggishorn (talk) (contrib) 16:23, 20 October 2017 (UTC)[reply]
So the condition of the 2008 article is what led to the creation of RY. By the end of June 2008, the 2008 article was already over 90,000 bytes. With six more months to go in the year, it was already in "probably should be divided" territory and clearly on a path to exceeding "almost certainly should be divided" territory, and the efforts that went into trimming it back are ultimately what led to the creation of RY (see the section above #Historical education: One editor's history of this project). -- irn (talk) 16:44, 20 October 2017 (UTC)[reply]
Thank you for being the first to provide some version of the evidence I've been stating has been lacking throughout these multiple discussions, @Irn:. I obviously didn't go back far enough in the edit history. That said, I don't agree that the page history shows good evidence that the article was getting too long and would have created difficulties even if allowed to grow unchecked. There are literally 10,000 pages that are currently longer than 2008 at it greatest extent. Even on my 5-year-old Android phone, I have zero problems loading or reading Raymond Burr (119,842bytes). It didn't even choke on 1944 Birthday Honours (500,083 bytes). Admittedly, List of members of the Lok Sabha 1952-2017 at 1,113,541bytes does crash my phone's app, but that's an order of magnitude bigger than any post-2002 year article I looked at. Unless or until recent year articles start breaking the >500,000byte level, I still don't see that there's an issue justifying the essay. If we look at all the years articles between 2002 (the earliest covered by the policy) and 2009 (the latest covered for a year before the essay was created), none reached anything like that at their greatest extents:
Year article Greatest extent (bytes) Peaked in year
2002 52.238 2006
2003 56,349 2007
2004 67,614 2007
2005 75,328 2008
2006 112,995 2009
2007 122,508 2007
2008 108,851 2012
2009 78,038 2016
The more I look for concrete evidence and statistics supporting the hypothesis that this essay is necessary (rather than anecdotes or armchair theorizing), the less I find supporting it and the more I find support for countervailing arguments. Most of them had gotten smaller even before the earliest efforts at a policy on exclusivity of year articles. The other two of those articles got bigger after this essay was created and one reached its greatest length when it had gotten elevated to guideline status. These are exactly the opposite effects we'd expect if the hypothesis was true. That suggests that not only is this essay not creating smaller articles but also that it isn't having even the selectivity effects that its proponents envisioned. Eggishorn (talk) (contrib) 17:55, 20 October 2017 (UTC)[reply]
First, just some minor nit-picking: Xtools doesn't track article size perfectly. I think it just gives the size at the end of the year. So, for example, the largest that 2007 ever got was actually 128,324 bytes on August 18, 2008. Ultimately, I don't know how much of a difference that makes, and I don't feel like going through and checking all of them; I think your general point still stands.
Your argument that the recommendations of WP:AS should be ignored is an interesting one, and I hadn't thought about that. I had just kind of assumed that the people who created WP:AS created those recommendations for good reason, but that is merely an assumption.
However, accepting that the general recommendations of WP:AS are still valid, your greater argument (that you don't see the need) strikes me as flawed. There was a problem (as seen in 2008); RY was created to address that problem. The fact that there has been no problem since then is as much proof that this has been working as it is that there's no need for it.
You can also compare the growth of year articles over time. Whereas most non-RY but still relatively recent year articles have grown over time as little by little people add births, deaths, and events (especially those from the late 80s into the 90s), RY articles have generally held pretty stable, which I see as evidence that RY is working. -- irn (talk) 22:09, 20 October 2017 (UTC)[reply]
  • No this "birth of the internet" or "Birth of Wikipedia" is a red herring, and a really unhelpful one, especially to our readers who are not aware (nor should they be) of the arcane machinations of project selection criteria. Books and encyclopedias were printed before, during and after the internet boom, and no-one is talking about listing everyone who died in any year in the year article, that's already covered elsewhere. The delineation is completely fake and totally unnecessary. The Rambling Man (talk) 15:42, 20 October 2017 (UTC)[reply]
The RY guideline was created to counter the flood of insufficiently notable events and deaths which were being added to recent year articles. In the absence of restriction on entries, the more recent a Year article is, the longer it tends to be. Media coverage has increased massively during the last few decades. Jim Michael (talk) 18:42, 20 October 2017 (UTC)[reply]
Adequately and evidentially disproven above. Cheers! The Rambling Man (talk) 08:36, 21 October 2017 (UTC)[reply]
The fact that, during the 2010s, year articles covering the 80s and 90s have been greatly expanded - whilst RY articles haven't - is proof that the RY guideline is necessary and was effective. If anything, it should cover more years. Jim Michael (talk) 15:35, 21 October 2017 (UTC)[reply]
Like...... all years!!!!!!! Checkmate. The Rambling Man (talk) 18:59, 21 October 2017 (UTC)[reply]
  • No The fact that, even at their largest extents, no year article of any recency shows up anywhere on LongPages proves that the repeated argument that the guideline is "necessary" is either personal preference of a tiny handful of editors or outdated information. The project is more than capable of handling year article pages of unrestrained length. Eggishorn (talk) (contrib) 17:27, 21 October 2017 (UTC)[reply]
The Year articles which have been most expanded are those which are the most recent not to be covered by RY. If the RY guideline hadn't been implemented, the years covered by RY would be the longest of all the Year articles. Very long articles full of events and deaths that aren't internationally notable would dilute the value of the articles and would reduce the number of people reading the sub-articles such as 2017 in science and 2017 in the United States. Jim Michael (talk) 21:38, 21 October 2017 (UTC)[reply]
Prove your assertion, and even if you could, that's a problem because.... ? The Rambling Man (talk) 22:04, 21 October 2017 (UTC)[reply]
By the way, so-called "very long articles full of ... deaths which aren't inernationally notable" such as Deaths in 2017 receive an average of 105,000 views per day, while the curated and heavily managed 2017 gets around 5,500. Why are you working so hard to ensure our readers avoid these cherry-picked pages and head straight for the comprehensive versions? The Rambling Man (talk) 22:11, 21 October 2017 (UTC)[reply]
No-one is suggesting that Deaths in 2017 and similar articles be deleted or reduced in length. They're so long that they're divided by month. The deaths list for the current year is always one of the most frequently viewed pages because it's where readers who are looking for information about people who died recently. All those deaths can't be and shouldn't be on the relevant year article.
You appear to be implying that RY articles would be read more often if they were longer. That's almost certainly true, but it would also almost certainly significantly reduce the number of people who would read the subarticles, such as 2017 in music and 2017 in the United Kingdom. Many people go directly to either one of the subarticles, or to the articles of the people or events which they want to read. I disagree with your assertion that lengthening RY articles is in the interests of our readers. Jim Michael (talk) 13:36, 22 October 2017 (UTC)[reply]
I disagree with your continued assertions of what should be testable facts without any evidence to back it up. How do we know that longer year articles would "...almost certainly significantly reduce..." readership of any articles? Did we test that previously? Are there readership trends that can be linked to? Is it anecdotal memory or personal supposition? Where is the evidence to support these conclusions? Eggishorn (talk) (contrib) 16:30, 22 October 2017 (UTC)[reply]
Indeed, it's tiring to combat the continual reiteration of the "Kim Kardashian" argument or the "unpopular around a watercooler" claims. These are absolutely not what our readers believe, and absolutely not what our community believes. One could conjure up 100 arguments in an attempt to claim some kind of RY boundary exists, but the simple fact of the matter is that it really doesn't. Apply a common approach to all year articles. Some will have more than others. A good comparison is taking a look at the content in The Boat Races 2016 and The Boat Race 1963 for example. Both are comprehensive, for the available material, and that's what our readers expect. They don't suddenly expect a cut-off point at which some items are mysteriously (to them, because they don't and shouldn't need to read the essay at RY) aren't allowed. That's not serving our readers well at all. And honestly, this is 2017, all this talk of "long pages" relating to >100KB, give me strength, I have a <1MB/s connection at home and I can cope with just about every page Wikipedia throws at me. It only actually gets a little worse when rendering pages with tons of transcluded templates, and articles such as 2017 don't have that all. So, time to get with the present people. TL;dr: we may need some criteria, but they should apply to all year articles and we shouldn't be scared of large articles!! The Rambling Man (talk) 18:10, 22 October 2017 (UTC)[reply]
  • Comment I think a really important point is being missed here. Irn and Jim - why are we working so hard to create weird, inexplicably cherry-picked annual summaries of incomplete information, based on POV and suffering problems with bias and arguments regarding criteria, when the supposedly more bloated and horrible articles of complete information receive 20 times the daily hits? Sounds like people aren't liking your annual summaries. 62.255.118.6 (talk) 16:15, 23 October 2017 (UTC)[reply]
    Yes, as I noted above, the RY articles seem to get a readership about equivalent to a weak DYK while the main "Deaths in..." articles receive nearly as much interest as the Main Page. So in any language, that would seem to imply that readers prefer the comprehensive list to the cherry-picked list, by about 20 to 1. Ironically, we have some of the regulars here "maintaining" articles like 2010s which (despite it being three years from completion) is already at >370KB. What a terrible mishmash of ideas, doctrine, implementation and enforcement. Pity our readers. The Rambling Man (talk) 19:12, 23 October 2017 (UTC)[reply]

Sorry for the big post: This is actually what brought me to this ol’ mess to begin with. I was in the office discussing the spate of deaths to have occurred in the last year and ventured onto Wikipedia for a ballpark figure – I went in via the year and noticed several deaths were missing.

There was no explanation as to why they were not included, no explanation that the year article was a cherry picked summary, how this cherry picking was undertaken, by who and why. It just appeared like an article inexplicably missing information.

I then came across the ‘deaths in’ article and found a comprehensive list. It occurred to me that I would never use the Year article from that point forward, because it would be missing information and perhaps I wouldn’t know what was missing or why - the article would basically be erroneous and redundant.

Realising this would be true of all year articles, I thought I’d see what was going on ‘under the hood’. At first I thought a better criteria for inclusion should be established which helped make it clear to readers (like me) what the situation was. I must say I’ve been pretty shocked by the behaviour of Arthur Rubin, an admin, and a handful of others, most notably Jim Michael, who have been so difficult and averse to change. The regulars here have taken things personally, shown incredible ownership issues, even resorting to lying to discredit another editor, talk page harassment, warnings and general roadblocking to keep the status quo, which considering the mess, seemed utterly irrational and in no way putting the readers and the project first.

That aside, and having learnt more about the Recent Years differential, I find the whole thing to be an even bigger, convoluted and confusing mess – especially when looking through the eyes of a reader.

We don’t need Recent Years. Nobody outside of Wikipedia understands. It’s only defence seems to be to ensure Year articles don’t become comprehensive accounts of what happened that year. Read that back and tell me you don’t instantly recoil and think WHAT? And WHY? Wikipedia is an encyclopaedia. It should be showing comprehensive and complete information. It’s not Heat magazine, providing tasty snippets of favourite deaths and events. We don’t have the means to justify cherry-picking – we aren’t a source that is supposed to operate under a bias, or for a target audience. We are supposed to be an impartial, factual record. We shouldn’t be writing articles with the mentality of “Hey! We are Wikipedia and these are the deaths and events we think are most important!” So Year articles very much should be what the core ‘owners’ are fighting against – a comprehensive record of events and deaths that year.

Or they shouldn’t exist at all and we should stop duplicating information in an unclear, misleading manner that readers have zero clue about. As how would anyone know that the list of deaths they found in 2017 (or any year) was missing important information? If it was Arthur and Jim’s article, in 2017 major earthquakes and shootings would not have happened and famous people like Bruce Forsyth, Sean Hughes and the co-founder of an international seminal rock band would not have died. Is this really what we want to be showcasing?

In my mind, scrap Recent Years entirely. Year articles can provide links to the more comprehensive lists at country-based year articles, and the complete ‘Deaths in’ articles. There is zero need to duplicate information, especially incomplete information, with no explanation to the reader and no clear rationale for doing so. 62.255.118.6 (talk) 12:55, 24 October 2017 (UTC)[reply]

Sean Hughes and Scott Putesky aren't among the most important people to have died this year - they're not even among the most important in their respective countries.
Information being duplicated is inevitable. Articles such as 2017 in music, 2017 in film and 2017 in science will include some of the info that's on 2017 in the United States, 2017 in the United Kingdom etc. Jim Michael (talk) 19:42, 24 October 2017 (UTC)[reply]
Yes, it would be much easier for our readers, and much more comprehensive, to point at Deaths in 2017. Burying each notable death or omitting it entirely because of a personal preference or arcane selection criterion should be discouraged, the pageviews clearly make a case for the comprehensive WP:GNG list, rather than this rather opaquely selected group of "super notable" individuals. Page length is not an issue by the way, this is 2017 now, not 2002 when most of us dreamed of free dial-up accounts at Compuserve. The Rambling Man (talk) 20:00, 24 October 2017 (UTC)[reply]
@Jim Michaels: So why duplicate it further unnecessarily in a clandestine, confusing and incomplete manner? 62.255.118.6 (talk) 12:21, 25 October 2017 (UTC)[reply]
At the end of each year, many mainstream media sources produce lists of people who died during the year; some produce lists much earlier of those who've died during the year so far. Those lists don't usually include people of marginal notability - they're shorter lists of the more important people. We should do likewise - and we do. No-one's claiming that RY articles would be so long that they would take a long time to load or would crash. We're providing a concise review of the events & deaths of each year. Jim Michael (talk) 12:55, 25 October 2017 (UTC)[reply]
No, that's not what's being provided at all, as evidenced by page views. If readers genuinely felt they were getting something positive from these RY articles, they'd received more than an average DYK's worth of hits per day. The current approach may serve the needs and wishes of the established users here, but that is in direct contradiction of all the evidence suggesting that the current approach does not serve the general community of editors well, nor, most importantly, our readers. Take an example. 2005 received an average of 440 page views per day over the past month. Thats only twice as many page views as my own talk page. No-one is interested in these RY articles, they contain (to our readers) a bizarrely selected set of events and a group of "super notable" deaths, the criteria for which is completely undetermined. Little wonder no-one outside the users here are really interested in such articles. Concise (in this situation) is the enemy of the reader. This is not a paper encyclopedia. The Rambling Man (talk) 20:02, 26 October 2017 (UTC)[reply]
@Jim Michael: Mainstream media sources have a target demographic they shape their content for. Wikipedia is an encyclopaedic database of information. We shouldn't be cultivating POV lists, especially when doing so is highly contentious and barely worth doing in terms of readership. Encyclopaedias should strive to provide complete information. Not half the information with no explanation or warning that what we are presenting is missing so much. 62.255.118.6 (talk) 12:23, 27 October 2017 (UTC)[reply]
  • No - There should be the same format and consistency throughout, The whole "before 2002 this applies and after 2002 this applies" makes no sense, Apply one consistent format or whatever throughout all years. –Davey2010Talk 15:59, 27 October 2017 (UTC)[reply]
Then we need to establish a set of inclusion criteria for all year articles. Jim Michael (talk) 17:48, 27 October 2017 (UTC)[reply]
I agree Jim, By all means start another RFC to establish a criteria (I'm only saying you because you're the most knowledgable with all this), Thanks, –Davey2010Talk 17:57, 27 October 2017 (UTC)[reply]
No, that's not true. The "non-RY" articles, i.e. everything from 2001 backwards, have had no inclusion criteria applied whatsoever. Why do we have literally hundreds of articles about year events without any criteria and yet around 16 with criteria, most of which have been deemed patently unsuitable? We could just rely on our community to decide what is in and what is out, that's a perfectly Wikipedian manner of inclusion, and presumably how every single article from 2001 backwards has operated for some time now. We have GNG and community consensus, that's all we need! The Rambling Man (talk) 22:18, 27 October 2017 (UTC)[reply]
They should all have criteria, but writing and establishing them has been neglected. Older years haven't had as much added to them, so the problem of insufficiently notable additions is less severe there. The RY criteria were established to stem the flow to the worst-affected year articles. Jim Michael (talk) 01:28, 28 October 2017 (UTC)[reply]
If the thousands of pre-2001 articles have been fine for time immemorial then there's no logic in trying to apply any kind of RY at all. And we have plenty of consensus here agreeing with that position, so we will simply mark RY as historical and move on. The Rambling Man (talk) 06:51, 28 October 2017 (UTC)[reply]
Not since time immemorial; WP was created in 2001. They aren't fine - they need inclusion criteria because insufficently notable events, births and deaths are frequently added to them.
Another reason for having a higher entry bar for recent years compared to older ones is that recent years have far more subarticles to accommodate the many more entries. Jim Michael (talk) 16:55, 28 October 2017 (UTC)[reply]
No, that's not true. They're just fine. Check this out, it demonstrates that the two years before the RY boundary get 50% more pageviews than the two years after RY! And even extending that search range demonstrates that RY adds nothing at all to the readership of the recent articles. Our readers seem to think that articles outside the remit of the RY criteria are just fine and that's what we're here to do, provide our readers with what they want. The Rambling Man (talk) 17:12, 28 October 2017 (UTC)[reply]
That supports my assertion to a degree. The articles that weren't under RY are longer, so they receive more views - but there are fewer sub-articles than there are for recent years. The RY criteria had the effect of diverting many readers from the main page to its subarticles for more in-depth coverage devoted to its topic/country. Jim Michael (talk) 17:59, 28 October 2017 (UTC)[reply]
No, it directly contradicts what you've just said. The years prior to RY are more popular than the RY ones, and the years prior to RY have no guidelines. This is all about serving our readers, and the RY articles, per the evidence, clearly do not. Readers are not diverted elsewhere, those articles are seldom viewed. Anyway, we have a clear consensus here to remove RY altogether, so I think we're done for now! The Rambling Man (talk) 18:01, 28 October 2017 (UTC)[reply]
They're viewed less often because many readers go directly to the sub-article(s) which they are interested in. Jim Michael (talk) 18:04, 28 October 2017 (UTC)[reply]
[citation needed]. The Rambling Man (talk) 18:08, 28 October 2017 (UTC)[reply]
The more recent a year article is, the more sub-articles it has. The total number of views of all sub-articles for a year increase the more recent it is. That proves that more readers are going to the sub-articles for recent years. Jim Michael (talk) 18:30, 28 October 2017 (UTC)[reply]
No Jim, that's not true. There are hundreds of articles prior to RY which are sub-articles of years. RY doesn't have exclusive rights over sub-articles. Please don't continue to make false assertions. WP:DISRUPTSIGNS. The Rambling Man (talk) 18:35, 28 October 2017 (UTC)[reply]
I didn't claim that RY has exclusive rights over sub-articles. I said that the older the year, the fewer sub-articles it has. The larger number of sub-articles for recent years means that many readers go to those sub-articles - decreasing the viewership for the main articles for recent years. Jim Michael (talk) 23:40, 29 October 2017 (UTC)[reply]
It doesn't really matter what you believe to be the case, we have a clearcut consensus that RY is no longer required. The Rambling Man (talk) 06:52, 30 October 2017 (UTC)[reply]
  • No per TRM. If there is going to be a set criteria at all, which might itself be overly bureaucratic as opposed to just the normal BRD cycle, they should be standardized across all years. Looking at recent discussions on this topic, it seems that this guideline is used to artificially relocate items that would've made into pre-RY articles on the basis of arbitrary criteria. ---- Patar knight - chat/contributions 14:55, 30 October 2017 (UTC)[reply]
  • Comment no comments have been made on this discussion for nearly four weeks so I suggest it is closed according to the consensus. The Rambling Man (talk) 09:09, 26 November 2017 (UTC)[reply]
  • Kind of? 2002 is very arbitrary, but I can see applying a different set of standards to the current year (and perhaps the previous year) to prevent issues with WP:RECENTISM. On the other hand, I see no reason to distinguish between 2001 and 2008. ~ Rob13Talk 17:26, 28 November 2017 (UTC)[reply]
    Do you think our readers expect such an arbitrary delineation? The Rambling Man (talk) 17:27, 28 November 2017 (UTC)[reply]
  • Comment time to close this discussion and end the debate. There's a clear consensus against this arbitrary delineation between the format of so-called "recent year" articles, there's been no substantive addition to this debate for several weeks, so it's time to finally resolve this. The Rambling Man (talk) 08:39, 12 December 2017 (UTC)[reply]
  • Neutral – Special guidelines for recent years may not be required at all. If we do keep any, they should be drawn out from wide community input, instead of the walled garden approach that has been prevalent since this guideline was established. — JFG talk 12:13, 15 December 2017 (UTC)[reply]
  • Comment – Close requested.[1]JFG talk 12:13, 15 December 2017 (UTC)[reply]
The discussion above is closed. Please do not modify it. Subsequent comments should be made on the appropriate discussion page. No further edits should be made to this discussion.

New Format Year Articles Solution

We should always favour the most simple, clear and logical way to present our information.

It’s my opinion that there is no logical need to differentiate recent years from non-recent years, as discussed above.

Wikipedia is NOT a media company with a POV tailored to a target demographic. We are an encyclopaedic source of complete information. We should always strive to avoid creating content according to bias. Cultivating discriminate lists IS creating content according to bias. The criteria by which we are trying to cultivate these lists, is controversial in itself, as the notion of notability is subjective and we as editors cannot even agree what it is, or on a way to measure it.

The simplest, clearest and most logical step forward would be to simply stop doing it. There is no coherent argument as to why we should be doing it. “Other media sources do it” – well, we aren’t a media source. “It’s helpful to our readers” – our readers don’t seem to visit these cherry-picked articles at all, and much favour the comprehensive lists RY link to. “It presents information in a clearer way” – well, it doesn’t because the reader is completely in the dark; nowhere in these articles is it explained that the events/deaths listed are incomplete, why they are incomplete, why specific information may be missing or how the process works.

So I propose a completely simple resolution, that avoids POV, conflict, controversy, argument, duplication and confusion. Just YEAR articles, formatted thus:



20XX

--Lede--

Events

By Topic:

  • Events by topic links

By Place:

  • Events by place Links

Births

Deaths

  • Link to Deaths in 20XX


Job done. Minimal admin, minimal conflict, just a clean source of links to complete, comprehensive information and no need for these redundant, meaningless, unused, time sink POV lists. 62.255.118.6 (talk) 12:45, 3 November 2017 (UTC)[reply]

That is a very reasonable and logical argument. Thank you for proposing it! However, I think it misses a key point: these are articles about years. There's no reason that 2017 as a year can't have an article explaining what happened that year just like 2017 in India exists as an article explaining what happened in India that year. Just because we're having a hard time reaching consensus doesn't mean we should give up entirely. Also, what would go in the lead? And how would we write the lead while avoiding all of the pitfalls you've enumerated?
Also, Cultivating discriminate lists IS creating content according to bias. This is a bit more philosophical, but literally every decision that is made by an editor is subjective and is, therefore, affected by bias. Every edit is the result of someone's opinion. We can't get rid of that; we can only try to create systems to minimize its effect (see, for example, WP:SYSTEMICBIAS). But even looking at your solution, 2017 in India is subject to the same bias problems as 2017, only on a smaller scale: instead of asking which events are of international importance, the question becomes which events are of national importance. You can't avoid that sort of subjectivity; it's present in literally everything we do here. It's just that in this situation, it's more obvious than in others. But the solution shouldn't be to gut the article, but rather to come up with a system to handle these differences of opinion. RY was an attempt at that. It wasn't perfect – the 9 wiki rule is arbitrary and the “international significance” requirement is vague and was interpreted by the most active users in a very restrictive sense, both of which seem to have frustrated many users – but it's better than ditching the year articles all together.
And there seems to be this idea that because RY is no longer a guideline, it should be disregarded entirely, but I would like to point to the closing decision, which stated editors are advised to try to follow by the essay as far as possible, while working in the subject area. -- irn (talk) 13:51, 3 November 2017 (UTC)[reply]
What happened in India in 2017 is not up for the same level of debate. It happened in 2017. It happened in India. There is very little cherry-picking, as the objective is clearer and events are fewer. As it is sourced at 2017 in India, we would simply just have to link to it from the 2017 year article, under ‘by country’. The data would be recorded, and would be filed correctly and logically.
On the other hand, what happened in ‘the world’ in 2017, is entirely up for debate. We don’t have any idea what constitutes as internationally significant. We have different nationalities, with different POV’s, arguing with different ideas of whether something is important or not. Instead of a national gauge of impact we have a varying degrees of crystal balling and conjecture. Cherry-picking what ‘domestic events’ (every event is domestic) is significant to the world incurs offence, exclusion, accusation and argument – which occurs far less under a shared nationality. If we record everything that happened, we may as well just link to the sub-articles and avoid duplication. If we present an abridged list, it is entirely subject to POV/bias as I outlined above. And we would need a reason to do this, and a way of doing so. We don’t have either.
I’m not arguing that, because RY is no longer a guideline, we should abandon it. I’m arguing that there is actually no logical reason for RY and no sound way of doing it anyway. Pointing out the country sub-articles as a reason for RY is an erroneous argument. 62.255.118.6 (talk) 11:39, 6 November 2017 (UTC)[reply]
While what is "national" may not be up for the same level of debate, it's still very much up for debate, and I see no reason to believe that any list aggregating national events won't run into the problems with aggregating a list of international events. Just as some events appear "international" to some and merely "national" to others, within a country, you can just as easily have events that appear to be "national" to some and merely "local" to others. (I do agree with you that I would expect there to be less disagreement and less conflict, but, as you've stated, forcing all events off the main year page will draw more attention to the year-in-country articles, which will increase that level of debate.) Essentially, your proposal doesn't solve the problem of a cherry-picked list because the national lists are also inherently cherry-picked. If the cherry-picking is your main concern, the only way I can see around this would be to mandate that the lower-level articles include everything that happens within the borders of a given country – every notable event, every notable birth, and every notable death. If that is your argument, I think that needs to be made explicit. I also think it's untenable.
That said, systemic bias is my main concern here, and I think this proposal does address systemic bias in a constructive way. I'd like to find a better solution because I think that having an article about each year that actually offers an overview of what happened in that year is useful. But if we can't come up with anything that adequately addresses systemic bias, I'd be willing to support this proposal.
tl;dr I disagree with the logic behind your proposal, but I could get behind it if we can't come up with a better way to address systemic bias. -- irn (talk) 14:56, 6 November 2017 (UTC)[reply]
Lolz, it amuses me that you are disagreeing with my proposal because it fails to address the possible bias and conflict that exists on the national articles. I’ve clicked through ten random national articles and found a grand total of two comments!
Even if there were heated debate, conflict and bias being thrown around at national level, its completely illogical to suggest we carry on doing something preposterous, because the same preposterousness is happening on sub-articles. That’s close to the ludicrous stuff Jim and Arthur were coming out with in defence of the RY essay (my favourites: “this is the way it’s always been done” and “its better than nothing”).
It’s a shame you also ignore my point that national impact and national notability is infinitely more measurable than international impact and notability. I shouldn’t really need to spell it out but a great national sportsman doesn’t incite an argument about the popularity of the sport. A national celebrity doesn’t incite a fight between people with drastically different awareness of them. An event that made the news in a country undoubtedly had justifiable notability for inclusion, and doesn’t incite a row about how many countries it was reported in, or how many nations it may directly or indirectly effect, immediately or in the future. People will be working from a shared consciousness and bias, even regional, is far far far less hypersensitive and fervent than national, if it is exists at all in some countries.
So no, what is “national” is not anywhere near the same level of debate and does not suffer from any of the hazards found in the cherry-picking at international level. Your argument doesn't have any weight to it. 62.255.118.6 (talk) 13:12, 7 November 2017 (UTC)[reply]
I’ve clicked through ten random national articles and found a grand total of two comments! That's because those sub-lists receive almost zero attention. Take India, for example. A country with a billion citizens, yet over 90% of content of 2016 in India was added by four (4) users. The sub-pages for smaller countries border on uselesness. The page 2017 in Sweden, as another example, list half as many notable deaths of Swedes than 2017, and its events section is a joke! How would delegating the responsibility to those benefit our readers, exactly? — Yerpo Eh? 14:53, 7 November 2017 (UTC)[reply]
Perfect example of the ownership issues here at RY. We aren't responsible for 2017, just as India with their billion citizens aren't responsible for India in 2017. We as editors are collectively responsible for all projects. Instead of some Norwegian chap trying to add a recently deceased skier to RY and getting embroiled in a timesink argument born of the subjectivity of notability or international impact or whatever the clandestine criteria buzz-word of the week is, he would add it to Norway. Hey! My idea not only rescues the omnishambles of RY, it also directs content towards and improves the national sub-articles! Thanks for pointing that out, Yerp XXX 62.255.118.6 (talk) 16:37, 7 November 2017 (UTC)[reply]
So now you're trying to force editors to start editing pages they're not interested in? What exactly you're hoping to achieve by that? — Yerpo Eh? 17:57, 7 November 2017 (UTC)[reply]
Why are you so rattled by this, Yerpo? I've proposed a helpful solution to a problem, and expressed exactly what I hope to achieve. I've not forced anybody to do anything, and neither would my proposal. If someone is interested enough in an event to add it to a year article, why would they "not be interested in" adding it to the country the event occurred in? Getting all hot and bothered about it is kinda weird. Why aren't you interested in finding a solution? It sometimes feels that RY exists more for the enjoyment of the regulars than for the actual readers we are supposed to be creating content for. Wikipedia isn't a space provider for pet projects. If you want to create a pointless annual review site that nobody visits, strewn with you own personal idea of who and what is important to you, why don't you sign up to a free blogging service or webhost? You could do what you liked then. I don't understand why you insist on doing it here, on an online encyclopaedia. 62.255.118.6 (talk) 11:57, 8 November 2017 (UTC)[reply]
Because annual reviews are encyclopedically relevant and, like any other page, they will require some sort of editorial selection. The only question is what kind. You may not remember, but I proposed at least one solution before, and explained why I don't think the laziest solution is good (IIRC, others weren't so enthusiastic about it either). If your personal opinion and feeling is that annual reviews are useless, why don't you just leave RY alone? What's here is certainly better than no content which is what you're proposing. Strawman arguments about my motives/emotions and false accusations about me not wanting to find a solution certainly aren't constructive, they only beg the question what is your real game here.
If someone is interested enough in an event to add it to a year article, why would they "not be interested in" adding it to the country the event occurred in? I don't know, but the fact is that they aren't. The state of sub-pages speaks for itself, eventhough nothing is preventing editors from adding events to both places (or to a sub-page alone if an event gets rejected here). So the logical conclusion is that your solution would diminish informational value of this encyclopedia - which is something I'm definitely opposed to. If that earns me a "rattled" label from you, well, let's just say that I won't lose any sleep over it. — Yerpo Eh? 16:37, 8 November 2017 (UTC)[reply]
The state of the sub pages is due to people posting stuff on RY. So that’s a circular argument. If Year articles became a constructive and useful link set to sub-pages, content would obviously be directed there. Meh, I’m just trying to help – you regulars need to stop acting like I’ve walked up and kicked over your sandcastle. In my opinion, annual reviews belong on news sites, not places which are supposed to offer complete information without bias. You are welcome to defend RY articles to the death, but nobody reads them. Which begs the question of whether they are indeed relevant, helpful or worth the time. Clicking on a year, and seeing a list of sub-categories relevant to that year which are home to comprehensive information, is an entirely logical process. You, Jim and Arthur lolling about making your own personal list of favourite celebs and topics you’ve nattered about with your mates isn’t, and doesn’t seem to be what editors or readers want. Sorry, bud. 62.255.118.6 (talk) 11:52, 9 November 2017 (UTC)[reply]
The state of the sub pages is due to people posting stuff on RY. So that’s a circular argument. Any evidence that this is actually happening? Even if it were, this would, ironically, disprove your fixed idea that RY lists are irrelevant. Also, thousands of daily views is far from "nobody reads them". So in the light of actual facts and logic, I will take the liberty of ignoring your arrogant description of what people you don't agree with are doing. Don't bother to reply if you're not willing to start contributing more constructively to this discussion. — Yerpo Eh? 12:54, 9 November 2017 (UTC)[reply]
I think it's clear I've contributed quite a lot constructively to this. I've presented a solution and I'm merely addressing your frostily delivered criticisms of it, that I don't find logical at all. Cool, I get it - you aren't on board. When the time comes, just !vote no. But nothing you have said here has really discredited the idea. you know I was speaking comparatively re: viewing figures, it's pretty explicit in my posts. And you surely you don't really believe the state of the sub-articles is a sound defence for retaining RY. But yeah, we've gone as far as we can here - until you are less rattled by the whole thing, there isn't much point chatting anything through with you further. 62.255.118.6 (talk) 12:18, 10 November 2017 (UTC)[reply]
Sorry, but I don't see the value in repackaging the same idea after it hasn't received support on more than one occasion earlier. Which is why I may have sounded annoyed, but my comments should be understood in this wider context. Anyway, yes, I do believe the state of the sub-articles is a sound defence for retaining RY - that approach to organizing content is not functioning and I've already said what I think about diminishing informational value of this encyclopedia. — Yerpo Eh? 10:20, 11 November 2017 (UTC)[reply]
  • This idea has been proposed and rejected before. (Even before WP:RY was proposed.) As it's a style guide as well as a content guide, more than two or three editors need to be in favor for it to be reconsidered. And the subarticles get more hits because they are allowed to be linked, while the year articles are not, per WP:YEARLINK. — Arthur Rubin (talk) 20:45, 11 November 2017 (UTC)[reply]
    So what? This micro-project now has a much wider audience and as such it's clear that "the way it's always been" is actually not in keeping with the community or the readers. So anything, even previously rejected by the tiny microcosm voting here previously, is perfectly allowable for suggestion. Plus, your claim that As it's a style guide as well as a content guide, more than two or three editors need to be in favor for it to be reconsidered. needs verifiable evidence. Please provide links to the relevant policies which say "more than two or three editors" need to ratify this suggestion. If not, I'd suggest you stop claiming some kind of authority over this, and other such discussions. The Rambling Man (talk) 21:57, 11 November 2017 (UTC)[reply]
    As a style guide, it is subject to voting, so it needs more votes in favor now than it had votes against then. There really are no "arguments" to be weighed. — Arthur Rubin (talk) 22:03, 11 November 2017 (UTC)[reply]
    No, you completely failed to answer my request. Please do so, i.e. cite the policy that is backing your continued claims. The Rambling Man (talk) 22:06, 11 November 2017 (UTC)[reply]
    Arthur Rubin, you didn't respond to this, could you now please provide evidence to back you original claim or redact it, thanks. The Rambling Man (talk) 21:37, 19 November 2017 (UTC)[reply]
  • Frankly, this feels like giving up. I understand this debate has been contentious, but I still think it's possible to make these articles—particularly the events sections—work properly. As far as the births/deaths, I have no problem keeping them out of the year articles and moving them to sub articles only. That seems reasonable. But we ought to be able to come up with a listing of events for the year. With births/deaths gone, I don't think there would be a problem with having 15-20 events per month. The page would still be manageable, and it would give readers a pretty good idea of what happened worldwide in a given year. agtx 13:49, 14 November 2017 (UTC)[reply]
What's logical for deaths is also logical for events. The only arguments against that so far seems to be Yerpo conjuring up weird notions that people will refuse to populate national event pages, and Arthur's whacko "we need a vote to allow this suggestion to be voted on". Both sound quite desperate to me. 62.255.118.6 (talk) 12:11, 15 November 2017 (UTC)[reply]
Actually, deaths are the easier problem to solve, using a combination of RS after the year has passed, as proposed earlier. Events could also work that way, but my idea was to solve deaths first, then talk about events. By the way, ignoring the facts that support the opposing argument and claiming that the argument "weird" is far more desperate than anything I've said. — Yerpo Eh? 13:18, 15 November 2017 (UTC)[reply]
Must be pretty rattled to resort to "no, you are!" repertoire. 62.255.118.6 (talk) 12:15, 17 November 2017 (UTC)[reply]
  • So, there is clearly not a consensus for this approach. Shall we close it and move on? — Arthur Rubin (talk) 07:22, 26 November 2017 (UTC)[reply]
It wasn't an RfC, though - it was an open discussion to see if a way forward could be fleshed out. Not many people running in from other rooms high-fiving me for the idea but still, it's rather colourful to describe "Arthur Rubin and Yerpo don't like it" as "clearly not a consensus" and kinda weird to insist it be "closed"62.255.118.6 (talk) 13:46, 27 November 2017 (UTC)[reply]

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