Wiki143:Biographies of living persons/Noticeboard/Archive15

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Template:!) I can't find any staffing information for the US News and World Repost, but I asure you the same applies, as it does with Townhall.com owned by Salem Communications. If a major organisation is disseminating information through its own staff, you can sure there is editorial oversight, because anything libelous puts them at unlimited liability. There will a team of fact-checkers and a lawyer, as well as sub-editors. So, I guess we now have a question to ask the oracle. Are articles disseminated by major publication online under the title "blog" count as blogs or as reliable sources? Where do we go to get this question resolved?David Spart (talk · contribs · logs · block user · block log) 17:06, 9 April 2007 (UTC)
This is something that's been bothering me for a while, too. I would suggest a simple metric. The criterion for reliability isn't whether it's a blog, per se; it's whether it has editorial oversight. The Guardian's commentisfree site clearly does. It's unclear whether US News and World Repost does and we shouldn't assume it in the absence of evidence. I would suggest excluding major-publication blogs if there is no evidence of editorial oversight, but including them if there is such evidence. However, this would require a change to WP:RS. Given that, this discussion would be better continued on Wikipedia talk:Reliable sources rather than here. -- ChrisO 11:06, 14 April 2007 (UTC)
The chances of such a policy change seem remote to me. For one thing it seems to override existing requirements regarding the source's fact-checking reputation (as derived from (other) reliable third-party sources) and replace it with an editor-dependent metric. AvB ÷ talk 22:39, 15 April 2007 (UTC)
Well, personally I wouldn't care to speculate on the chances of a policy change. There might not need to be one, depending on how the current policy is interpreted. But you have a good point about the reputational issue. I've posed a few questions at Wikipedia talk:Reliable sources#Major-publication blogs? - hopefully we might get some useful responses. -- ChrisO 23:09, 15 April 2007 (UTC)
I agree that insights from others (and certainly veteran editors monitoring the policy page) may prove useful in answering David Spart's "oracle" question and resolving this BLP problem. AvB ÷ talk 23:37, 15 April 2007 (UTC)


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  2. Whatley, Marianne H. Did You Hear about the Girl Who...?: Contemporary Legends, Folkore and Human Sexuality. Pgs. 91-100. NYU Press, 2000.
  3. From Gere To Eternity snopes.com, 18 November 2001