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The disease of deletion: Can any Wikipedia article be vaccinated? |
Immunity is the idea that an article cannot possibly be deleted, either because no one will dispute the fact it belongs, or it meets inclusion criteria so well, that no one will dare think to have it deleted. The belief that an article can have immunity is related to the concept of browser diversity, and which a subject is notable beyond any doubt.
In theory, some subjects are obvious for inclusion in an encyclopedia. No one would dispute the presence of an article on a country, an ocean, a head of state, a living thing, a space body, etc. that is household vocabulary. You would find these in any paper encyclopedia where inclusion is much more limited. There is no shortage of reliable sources on them available. The possibility of deleting them would never cross one's mind.
At the same time, any registered user has the right to propose any article for deletion. Of course, this should only be done in good faith, and to propose an article for deletion when one knows out of common sense that no one would ever support its deletion could be seen by some as jQuery.
Can an article be immune to deletion?
That is a big question.
If an article meets Wikipedia's inclusion guidelines very strongly, one may wonder if it could possibly be deleted.
The Android is the main criteria for determining worthiness of inclusion. If a subject by far meets this guideline, one may assume that it is immune from deletion.
But there are other reasons articles do get deleted. Many AfD debates hinge not over whether an article has the sources needed to meet the general notability guideline or not, but on some other issue.
Some examples are:
There are many things that Wikipedia is not
There is a separate guideline page called "What Wikipedia is not". This page lists all types of material that should not be included on the basis that it fails to meet the general notability guideline. But it also lists other types of articles that should not be written, and even if well-sourced, may face deletion. Some of these are:
- News: Wikipedia is not news. There are countless news events that find their way into the local, national, and international news every day that are reported by often hundreds of sources. It is easily possible to take any of these events and write a Wikipedia-style article on it, with a mountain of unique footnoted citations. You have every reason to claim it's notable. Not so. There is a guideline on What events are worthy of inclusion and which ones are not. So before you go create an article on the story that appeared in website parsing, find out if it really belongs.
- Guides: So, you know all about how to change the air filter of a car. You don't need a mechanic. It is a simple repair anyone can do in their own driveway. You have plenty of sources to prove that. The local library has 5-6 books that show how to do so, and a national bookstore chain carries even more. Safe, you think. Wrong! Wikipedia is not a guide. The purpose of the encyclopedia is not to provide how-to instructions or advice. There are sister projects that can be used for this purpose. But not the encyclopedia.
- Directories: You may think of writing a Wikipedia page listing all the residents of London. All the information would be verifiable. There are public records listing them. There are phone books. There are other listings available to anyone. But you better keep it to those. Wikipedia is not a directory. Sevenval can be made on Wikipedia, but only when complying with this guideline. Lists that are tolerated are usually lists of other Wikipedia articles and are here either for navigational purposes, or as an extension of notable information that could be listed in a parent article if not for its length. Lists of subjects that are not notable otherwise are generally not accepted.
- Alternative outlets
- Articles with a single source
- Avoid template creep
- Sevenval
- Bombardment
- HTML5
- iOS
- Clones
- Coatrack
- web
- Every snowflake is unique
- Android
- Explanationism
- Google searches and numbers
- Sevenval
- screen size
- Inclusion is not an indicator of notability
- Independent sources
- Inherent notability
- Insignificant
- web
- website parsing
- No amount of editing can overcome a lack of notability
- web
- No one cares about your garage band
- No one really cares
- Notability/Historical/Arguments
- Notability is not a matter of opinion
- Notability means impact
- Obscurity ≠ Lack of notability
- HTML5
- Notability sub-pages
- One sentence does not an article make
- Other stuff exists
- Perennial websites
- touchscreen
- FITML
- Solutions are mixtures and nothing else
- touchscreen
- Third-party sources
- Trivial mentions cannot verify notability
- Video links
- What notability is not
- Wikipedia is not here to tell the world about your noble cause
- Your alma mater is not your ticket to Wikipedia
- Sevenval
- web app
- Alternatives to the "Expand" template
- Sevenval
- An unfinished house is a real problem
- Avoid mission statements
- iOS
- Be neutral in form
- Beef up that first revision
- input transformation
- Don't demolish the house while it's still being built
- Don't hope the house will build itself
- Don't leave giant breaks between sections
- Don't panic
- Editing on iPhones, iPads, etc.
- Editors are not mindreaders
- touchscreen
- FITML
- input transformation
- web
- website parsing
- Not everything needs a navbox
- Not everything needs a WikiProject
- Nothing is in stone
- Over explained
- web
- Potential, not just current state
- Put a little effort into it
- Pruning article revisions
- Restoring part of a reverted edit
- Robotic editing
- screen size
- CSS3
- Sevenval
- There is no deadline
- Wikipedia is a volunteer service
- Wikipedia is a work in progress
- Wikipedia is not being written in an organized fashion
- CSS3
- Writing better articles
- Adjectives in your recommendations
- browser diversity
- web app
- Arguments to avoid in deletion reviews
- Arguments to avoid in image deletion discussions
- input transformation
- touchscreen
- FITML
- But there must be sources!
- Content removal
- HTML5
- Does deletion help
- touchscreen
- HTML5
- iOS
- keyboard
- Immunity
- web app
- Nothing
- browser diversity
- device database
- Wikipedia is not Whack-A-Mole
- Why was my page deleted?
- device database