Postwar Surrealism

Although in some cases it has been, may have been, or has arguably been justified, there is a tendency to delete articles having to do with post-World War II or contemporary surrealism. This tendency should be looked at more closely in future. --Daniel C. Boyer 15:09, 17 Feb 2004 (UTC)

Why 10 days?

I don't like the ten day period and the "ends this date" header at the top of each article. I'd rather we took a more flexible approach. Wnen there is clearly no consensus to undelete, we should remove entries earlier than ten days to keep the page short and relavent. When there is more argument we should leave the entry longer to see if agreement can be reached. I would rather people use thier judgement as to when to remove entries rather than have a rigid timeframe. Thoughts anyone? theresa knott 09:58, 8 Aug 2004 (UTC)

Ten days is what is stipulated in Wikipedia:Undeletion policy. It's by no means a hard-and-fast limit, but it's the outside time limit for when there is an ongoing discussion. If there is a clear decision earlier, then it can be handled earlier. I think it's still a good idea to leave the request listed for the full ten days, though, even if it has already been dealt with. - UtherSRG 16:27, 8 Aug 2004 (UTC)
The policy lists 10 days since people are likely to see this page less often than they see VfD, so the time was doubled to allow enough people to vote on the articles listed here. I think 10 days was more of a suggested minimum though, rather than an absolute rule. Angela. 21:50, Aug 11, 2004 (UTC)
It probably doesn't need to be as long as 10 days now. That policy was written at a time when there were very few people aware of this page, so it needed 10 days before enough people voted. If there are enough voters to see where the consensus lies earlier than this, then the pages may as well be dealt with before the end of 10 days. Angela. 19:27, Aug 17, 2004 (UTC)

More Significant Sources?

If an article previously went through the deletion process and was deleted, in part on the basis that the subject was too obscure, and was not mentioned in sources of sufficiently wide distribution, and subsequently the subject was so dealt with, should it be listed on pages for undeletion? Example: Daniel C. Boyer was previously deleted, but he is now listed in the 2005 edition of Who's Who in America. --65.174.34.14 18:30, 11 Aug 2004 (UTC)

Yes. This is no guarantee that the article will be undeleted, but being listed in Who's Who is certainly reasonable grounds for initiating the Vfu process. - UtherSRG 18:48, 11 Aug 2004 (UTC)
Note: he will now be listed in the 2006 "Who's Who in the World" as well as the 2006 edition of "Who's Who in America". --141.219.44.179 19:29, 29 May 2005 (UTC)
Did either become notable at some point? Last I saw, it was just a scam to get people to buy an overly expersive book with their name in it. —Ben Brockert (42) UE News 04:01, May 30, 2005 (UTC)

VfD format for VfU?

Explain that VfU is not a VfD re-run?

Should there be a clearer explanation along these lines:

Use VfU is to review possible errors or mistakes in the deletion process." For example, use VfU for
  • articles that received an administrative "speedy delete" that you think do not meet the criteria and deserve a full VfD discussion;
  • completed VfD discussions where you do not understand how the administrator determined "rough consensus."
Do not try to use VfU to discuss the merits of the case. You cannot re-run a VfD just because you have fresh points to make that you failed to make during the five-day run of the VfD, or just because you are dissatisfied with the way people voted.

(I know, it probably won't do any good...) Dpbsmith (talk) 17:30, 7 Apr 2005 (UTC)

Removing listings

How long are things supposed to stay on the VfU page? We have listings that are seven weeks old on there right now. I'm strongly considering removing a lot of them. RickK 18:48, Apr 19, 2005 (UTC)

Proposed revision to undeletion policy on exceptions

I have proposed a revision restricting the exceptions clause of undeletion policy. Please see Wikipedia talk:Undeletion policy#Proposed revision to "Exceptions" clause to comment and vote. Thanks, BanyanTree 14:51, 26 Apr 2005 (UTC)

What on earth is the rationale for re-VfDing after VfUing says undelete?

It's there in the policy. But what's the motivation for it? Pcb21| Pete 08:48, 1 May 2005 (UTC)

Consider it like a remand or a new trial—it's a do-over because something undermined what happened the first time. Postdlf 18:10, 3 May 2005 (UTC)
Because VfU is a vote on procedure, not on content. A vote to undelete is not, repeat not a vote to keep the article, it's a vote to repair a mistake in procedure. I frequently vote "undelete" on articles that I personally think should be deleted, but that I think deserve a proper VfD discussion on the merits.
The most typical and IMHO most proper use of VfU is to repair an improper speedy, VfU is saying "this should have been a VfD nomination instead." Sysops don't normally delete articles without good reason, but the criteria for speedy deletion are very restrictive and there's a tendency to stretch them. Here, VfU is saying "this should have been a VfD nomination, not a speedy."
Another point is that VfD itself is already a very conservative process that gives every opportunity for articles to be kept. Knowing that a VfU is automatically send back to VfD does three good things. It make the VfU process easier. It makes the ultimate outcome depend on the large number of users who participate in VfD rather than the small number who participate in VfU. And it help keep VfU nominators honest and prevents ways of gaming the system. Knowing that the article will be sent back to VfD makes it difficult to use VfU simply as a parliamentary maneuver for resisting a VfD. Dpbsmith (talk) 20:38, 3 May 2005 (UTC)
I can see the advantages of vfding an undeleted speedy. I still don't think the case for a second vfding is strong. You phrase things in terms of a parliament or judiciary. Analogies to a legal system are only so useful when our goal to create as much quality free content as possible. Pcb21| Pete 21:39, 3 May 2005 (UTC)
You hit the nail on the head. Our goal is to create as much quality free content as possible—not merely as much content as possible. If an article is of good quality, then it will survive the VfD, and no harm is done. Actually, VfD often serves as an informal but highly effective cleanup process because it draws focused community attention. The extra time on VfD often results in improvement to articles that would otherwise be sorely neglected. See for example Albert Carnesale: immediately before and after the VfD process. Before the VfD, the article had languished for ten months without appreciable improvement. --TenOfAllTrades (talk/contrib) 03:08, 23 May 2005 (UTC)
I call it "speedy cleanup", and sometimes it works very well. Three articles that I've put up to VFD have ended up much better for it. I'm still considering creating a speedy cleanup procedure, so that articles that are totally crap but are on notable subjects could have a short improvement period before getting nominated for the round file. —Ben Brockert (42) UE News 03:42, May 23, 2005 (UTC)

VfU only requires a majority to be overturned, whereas VfD requires a consensus. If the majority approves the VfU, and a consensus majority approves the VfD, the second VfD trumps the VfU. RickK 23:37, May 3, 2005 (UTC)

This needs to be made very clear; I've seen more than one VfD in which voters have voted to keep on the grounds that the article was successfully VfUed, so it must be OK. Mel Etitis (Μελ Ετητης) 10:07, 23 May 2005 (UTC)

Are these archived?

Are these VfU discussions archived anywhere, except the history? Just wondering... Kappa 08:03, 2 Jun 2005 (UTC)

Altar Q

Altar Q has been sitting around on VFU since May 21 with 5 to undelete and 4 to keep deleted. Isn't a simple majority enough to undelete it now? Sjakkalle (Check!) 06:11, 7 Jun 2005 (UTC)

Kantar

For purposes of review, please make available the content of the deleted entry... Kantar
oo-- dWs dsaklad@zurich.csail.mit.edu 17:29, 14 Jun 2005 (UTC)

Is this page becoming pointless?

It seems like the validness or otherwise of a vfd vote is reduced to a dumb counting of the original votes and if delete gets more than about 60%, saying "valid vfd". This page is pointless if we are not permitted to check whether the original voters got it right. Pcb21| Pete 8 July 2005 13:39 (UTC)

No because it works to pick out pages that have been incorrectly deleted, including speedies. Unfortunately that means vanity from the super-vain get listed here as they try to prove their notability. That is usually met with the response you mention which stops them coming back. Dunc| 8 July 2005 13:45 (UTC)
I agree. "Valid VfD" appears to be a simple kneejerk reaction and, in the case of Digg at least, it would seem to be wrong. This page is pointless if a substantial number of voters will not give adequate consideration to the article they are voting on (the same goes for VfD). The policy that successful undeletions will be listed on VfD is of particular concern: the process provides double jeopardy and is inherently biased toward deletion. ᓛᖁ♀ 14:52, 13 July 2005 (UTC)

Undelete and list on VfD

I thought I'd mention this before I forget again. Wikipedia:Undeletion policy explicitly states that articles that are undeleted as a result of VfU should immediately be listed on VfD, yet I've seen a few articles get undeleted, but not listed. I've listed one or two of them in the past, but I wonder if we should emphasise the fact that articles that get undeleted must also be listed in VfD? Something like a nice "Note to admins: When undeleting an article, be sure to also list it on VfD" notice on the top of the VfU page? --Deathphoenix 21:36, 11 July 2005 (UTC)

Let's change the policy. It is often useful to relist on VfD, but sometimes that would just be pointless bureaucracy. Pcb21| Pete 10:04, 12 July 2005 (UTC)
Since it's official policy, a change would require a vote, but hey, I'm all for it. Of course, if it passes, I'll have to remind myself to put Undelete and VfD for those articles that I think would require it. --Deathphoenix 13:26, 12 July 2005 (UTC)
I've made the change. There is no official policy that changes to "official policy" require a vote. The undeletion policy itself became "offical" (in the sense that a category and/or template was added to the page!) because it was long standing with only minor changes. Wikipedia hasn't got where it is today without the ethos of "be bold" - as you initially noted, people tend to ignore "official policy" went it is unduly cumbersome. Pcb21| Pete 21:02, 12 July 2005 (UTC)
I've changed the mention of "after about a week" on VfD to "after the usual 5 days" since that is VfD policy, after all. Things may not often be deleted on the dot of 5 days, but we'd only get procedural complaints if a VfD'd–VfU'd–VfD'd article was deleted after 5 days rather than 7. -Splash 00:36, 13 July 2005 (UTC)
Good change. Thanks. Pcb21| Pete 08:43, 13 July 2005 (UTC)
The solution to this, I think, is to explicitly forbid double jeopardy. If an article survives VfU, it should not have the potential to be deleted some time in the future. ᓛᖁ♀ 15:02, 13 July 2005 (UTC)
It's not double jeopardy. To continue the legal analogy, it's equivalent to declaring a mistrial. The previous VfD is invalidated, and a new "trial" is held. AиDя01DTALKEMAIL 15:10, July 13, 2005 (UTC)
Mistrials are declared during the original legal proceedings. VfU occurs long after VfD has completed; the appropriate analogy is the appellate court. ᓛᖁ♀ 15:15, 13 July 2005 (UTC)
Off-the-wall analogies aside, any user may come along and nominate any article for deletion at any time. It is not possible, or desirable, to immunize some articles against this process, which is the literal interpretation of what Eequor says. I think you probably just mean that it shouldn't go back to VfD as part of the VfU process, but I don't see it does much harm. -Splash 16:04, 13 July 2005 (UTC)
There's already significant social pressure against repeated renominations for deletion; we don't need a formal policy. If an article is nominated for deletion more than once in a short period, there is usually substantial criticism from VfD regulars. People vote against deletion on principle. Since it's already de facto policy, there's no reason to codify it—since we'll probably discover later that there ought to have been exceptions in the rule. TenOfAllTrades(talk) 16:44, 13 July 2005 (UTC)
All the legal analogies are misplaced. The judicial system refuses to reopen a dispute that's been settled, except under unusual circumstances, because it consumes resources and because parties should be able to rely on a result reached. Those considerations don't apply on Wikipedia. Previous decisions, on deletion or on anything else, are always subject to reconsideration, with the social pressure mentioned by TenOfAllTrades as the bulwark against abuse. JamesMLane 13:38, 20 July 2005 (UTC)

Formal suffrage?

I was wondering why VFU has a formal suffrage policy of 25 edits, where any other voting page (e.g. *FD, RFA, etc) has an informal suffrage policy that allows anyone to vote, but allows for some votes to be discounted (per common sense) if they have a lack of edit history. The specific rule for VFU sounds rather like instruction creep, and it also means that we must allow anyone to vote here if they follow the specifics of the rule, even if common sense would indicate otherwise (e.g. 25 major edits to a single article related to the VFU matter, or 25 major edits most of which were reverted, etc). If we're going to rely on common sense anyway, we could probably do without this strict line. Radiant_>|< 08:22, July 13, 2005 (UTC)

Non-sysops who wish to see the content of a deleted article

It says this page is for 2. "Non-sysops who wish to see the content of a deleted article. They may wish to use that content elsewhere, for example. Alternatively, they may suspect that an article has been wrongly deleted, but are unable to tell without seeing what exactly was deleted."

How is this accomplished? I can find no instruction. The XML export mentioned in the next paragraph didn't work for me; maybe I'm doing it wrong.GangofOne 08:41, 22 July 2005 (UTC)

The page needs to be undeleted first, then can be exported, before being deleted again. Cheers, smoddy 09:21, 22 July 2005 (UTC)
But by a sysop, right?GangofOne 18:15, 22 July 2005 (UTC)
Yes. smoddy 18:16, 22 July 2005 (UTC)

Consensus

What is the minimum for a VfU to pass? Is it consensus to undelete, a lack of consensus to delete, a majority? It is not made at all clear. Cheers, [[smoddy]] 21:43, 22 July 2005 (UTC)

official policy is here - Tεxτurε 21:52, 22 July 2005 (UTC)
Short version:
"If ten days elapse and the proposed undeletion lacks 3 supporters and a majority, then the page remains deleted (to avoid rapid re-deletion since deletion requires a two-thirds majority)."

VfU notice in VfD

Well, a long discussion is underway at Wikipedia talk:Votes for deletion/Harry Potter and the Half-Blood Prince - Full Plot Summary about how users that voted to keep an article did not know that it was up for undeletion and therefore the "Keep deleted" judgement at VfU is flawed. In order to stop this from happening further, I've created ((vfu)), which is meant to be used in conjunction with ((TempUndelete)). It's just an effort to keep these kinds of claims from happening again. Do you people think it should be included in the VfU instructions? --Titoxd 01:56, 4 August 2005 (UTC)

Some mention of the highly procedural nature of VfU might be in order. Voters there are, or should be, interested only in the validity of the deletion process, not the content. The similarity of this template to the VfD one (presumably intentional) risks turning VfU into a VfD in reverse. -Splash 02:14, 4 August 2005 (UTC)
I agree that VfU should not become a reverse VfD, and maybe the template needs to be reworded differently. Modify the template as you see fit. The only reason I modeled the ((vfu)) template after the ((vfd)) template was because I liked the design of the VfD notice. --Titoxd 02:20, 4 August 2005 (UTC)
You're absolutely right, Splash. Voters should be "interested only in the validity of the deletion process, not the content." VfU shouldn't be turned into "VfD in reverse." And yet, that's precisely what you (and others) did last month. —Lifeisunfair 11:43, 4 August 2005 (UTC)
I love this idea, Titoxd. --Arcadian 02:36, 4 August 2005 (UTC)
I made some changes. Though I've suddenly realised that I don't fully understand the purpose here. Why does the keep-voter's non-notification lead to a flaw in a vote to "keep deleted"? -Splash
Zen master's rationale is that if the keep-voters had been informed, the outcome would have been different (namely, the keep voters would have reached an undelete consensus), and the article would have been kept. But he also argues that the vote should never had been in VfU in the first place, so the VfU vote is not valid. I've been trying to say the opposite, and you can see the back-and-forth arguing that ensued. --Titoxd 03:07, 4 August 2005 (UTC)

Request for undeletion: Phank

The entry for Phank was not submitted by Phank, but rather by a fan. The votes for deletion listed Vanity as a primary reason for deletion, but Phank members had nothing to do with the entry. Additional mention was made of Phank being a non-notable MMO Guild. However, Phank has had a web update read weekly by thousands of fans for almost four years. The guild has been mentioned in Tim O'Reilly's weblog http://www.oreillynet.com/pub/wlg/3123 as a good example of an online community and has been referenced on Slashdot.


Name change (again)

It has been proposed at Wikipedia talk:Votes for deletion#Name_change_.28again.29 that this be renamed to Wikipedia:Deletion review or some such, to parallel the renaming of Wikipedia:Votes for deletion to Wikipedia:Pages for deletion in order to remove the word "votes" from the title and to be more consistent with our other "X for deletion" titles. Please discuss this proposal on that talk page. Uncle G 16:23:01, 2005-08-26 (UTC)

Articles for deletion actually, but yeah. :-) (PfD collides with IfD, TfD, and CfD, which also delete pages) Kim Bruning 01:08, 27 August 2005 (UTC)
Wikipedia:Undeletion would be better; avoids it being confused with Wikipedia:Deletion reform. This should be the place to come for precedural errors on IfD, TfD, CfD anyway. Septentrionalis 20:41, 28 August 2005 (UTC)
Wikipedia:Deletion redirects to Wikipedia:Deletion policy. Wikipedia:Undeletion shouldn't be a vote or discussion page, it should follow suit and redirect to the relevant policy page. -Sean Curtin 01:14, August 29, 2005 (UTC)

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