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RFC: Clarification over main-space to draft-space moves

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.


Can editors move articles that are not CSD candidates from the main-space into the draft-space? - hahnchen 02:18, 26 January 2016 (UTC)

WP:AI describes incubation as "soft deletion", WP:USERFY states that the process "effectively amount[s] to deletion of an article". Wikipedia has never allowed for removal of articles from the main space without process. Drafts should follow long-standing, widely held Wikipedia wide belief that removing articles from the main space requires consensus. Drafts are optional, they should not be imposed upon by others. The only main-space articles that can be moved to the draft-space should be CSD candidates. - hahnchen 02:35, 26 January 2016 (UTC)
  • Draft:The Story of Bonnie and Clyde is an example of an article that went into the incubator as a bold move.  Bulma was not part of a deletion process.  https://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=Wikipedia:Article_Incubator&oldid=393921998 states, "Article incubation is a process for identifying and improving articles that seem to have potential, but which are currently on track to be deleted or userfied. Articles can be moved, in lieu of deletion, from the main encyclopedia to the article incubator, where they are worked on collaboratively."  Unscintillating (talk) 00:18, 19 February 2016 (UTC)
    • Did it take you three weeks to come up with those "positive" examples? Because there are multiple examples below where removing articles from the mainspace without process was at best useless and at worst detrimental. The only thing removing The Story of Bonnie and Clyde did was to turn an AFD that should have happened in 2011 to an MFD that is happening now. The article has not been edited for three years, because unindexed and unsearchable in the draftspace, no one knows it exists. For Bulma, that was redirected to a parent page after notability concerns were raised on the talk page. Only after that did it get copied into the draftspace, where only following an MFD for being stale 12 months did any improvement get moved back into the mainspace. - hahnchen 09:06, 19 February 2016 (UTC)
      • Having drafts difficult to find is certainly a problem, but deleting them is certainly not going to solve it. How exactly is Wikipedia improved by having Draft:The Story of Bonnie and Clyde removed instead of visible? Diego (talk) 11:40, 19 February 2016 (UTC)
How about cloning it to the Draft space? And what if the article should be deleted from the main space, as it lacks notability, but the contents are verifiable and could be used elsewhere? In such case, there's no difference with moving the article to Draft, except that the edit history would be lost. Diego (talk) 09:03, 27 January 2016 (UTC)
I explicitly mentioned cloning it elsewhere; the draft space would certainly work. As to articles which should be deleted, either they get speedy, or they get PROD/AfD; in the former case, they may be moved to the draft space if some user thinks (s)he can improve it enough; in the latter case, wait until it would almost be deleted (wait 7 days for PROD, request it explicitly in an AfD). עוד מישהו Od Mishehu 16:47, 28 January 2016 (UTC)
Old articles (sometimes several years old) get deleted, too. I'd rather see those moved to draft space than completely removed and inaccessible. Mandating some previous discussion might be OK, but IMO requiring a full RfC or other formal process is overkill except when the move is contested. Honestly, I would treat moving articles to draft space just like any other page move. Diego (talk) 23:11, 27 January 2016 (UTC)
Old articles should only be removed from the mainspace via the deletion process, same for new articles - which was exactly the case before the speedy draft clause was implemented without discussion or consensus. It really does mandate process, because one should not be able to speedily draft an article from 2004, and have it silently deleted in 6 months. - hahnchen 00:22, 28 January 2016 (UTC)
  • For what its worth, the proposer has also complained multiple times to WikiProject Video Games about about editors and their BOLD redirects/merges, where he's usually told by editors (myself included) that its allowed as long as its a good-faith, with edit summaries, and following BRD. So basically, he seems to have the same hangups with your examples of things that are also okay. You make an interesting point though - even if there was a consensus against BOLD moves to draftspace, then editors would just take the BOLD redirect route instead, which isn't particularly better, as new editors often mistake redirects for outright deletion/unavailability of content. Sergecross73 msg me 16:35, 28 January 2016 (UTC)
  • @Rhododendrites: Previous guidelines that drafts replace such as the article incubator and userfication, and long standing deletion policy, state that articles can only be removed from the main space via the deletion process. The current draft guideline says that deletion process is no longer required. The question is being asked to ascertain whether that change is endorsed. - hahnchen 17:19, 28 January 2016 (UTC)
  • WP:Deletion Policy does NOT say articles can only be moved from mainspace via deletion process. It does however directly state that incubation to Draftspace is an alternate to deletion, and appears to support the current guideline here. -- ferret (talk) 17:45, 28 January 2016 (UTC)
  • Yes but long standing deletion policy gave no allowance to the removal of articles from the main space without process. The incubation paragraph, which directly contradicted what was written in the incubator itself, was added without discussion. It is the same change as is being discussed here. - hahnchen 18:06, 28 January 2016 (UTC)
  • This diff during the closure of Article incubator suggests that editors involved in the creation of the Drafts namespace and closing the incubator felt there was some consensus for this to be included. However, trying to comb the multiple discussions and RFCs from that period I couldn't find anything conclusive. Could @Davidwr and Unscintillating possibly be able to point to the right discussion to show this? -- ferret (talk) 15:26, 30 January 2016 (UTC)
  • I was not active during the heyday of the WP:AI.  SilkTork might know if there was discussion, and I don't recall being aware of his involvement on this topic.  Do we agree that we all have, as a fundamental principle, the right to edit without getting permission? Unscintillating (talk) 19:29, 30 January 2016 (UTC)
  • See also the editing guideline WP:Be Bold#Non article namespacesUnscintillating (talk) 19:29, 30 January 2016 (UTC)
  • Deletion processes are for articles that need admin tools.  WP:Deletion policy, in the section on Alternatives to Deletion states,

    Articles which have potential, but which do not yet meet Wikipedia's quality standards, may be moved to the Wikipedia:Drafts namespace, where they may continue to be collaboratively edited before either "graduating" to mainspace or ultimately being deleted.

Unscintillating (talk) 19:29, 30 January 2016 (UTC)
  • @Nathan2055: The major issue with your recommended solution is that in WP:AFD's current state and guidelines, the nominator has to nominate the article specifically for deletion. Other editors are free to suggest alternatives during the course of the discussion, but the nominator is restricted to advocating for deletion. If any other action is suggested by the nominator, the discussion gets closed to "wrong forum". If your idea is to be executed adequately, AFD needs to be renamed "Articles for discussion" first to allow the nominator to provide alternative options than deletion. Steel1943 (talk) 20:19, 29 February 2016 (UTC)
Hahnchen When I nominated it for AfD it was in a horrible state, no actual references, very little info, etc. Anarchyte (work | talk) 05:35, 8 February 2016 (UTC)
Anarchyte I agree that the article was in a bad state. It would still be in a bad state had it remained in draft. - hahnchen 11:26, 8 February 2016 (UTC)
  • @SilkTork:: (1) WP:Soft deletion and WP:SOFTDELETE are a redirects to WP:Deletion process...the definition you are using from WP:AI has been marked "historical".  (2) You are the editor who added the word "may" in WP:ATD-I, that articles "may" be moved to draft space, diff.  (3) WP:ATD-I is a part of alternatives to deletion, while WP:DEL-PROCESSES is for deletion processes.  (4) You've not discussed the impact on a fundamental principle, the right to edit without permission.  Why isn't incubation an admin process?  Unscintillating (talk) 01:29, 2 February 2016 (UTC)
Unscintillating (talk) 01:29, 2 February 2016 (UTC)
davidwr/(talk)/(contribs) 01:34, 2 February 2016 (UTC)
  • The close for an AfD nomination marked "move to Draft" is WP:SK#1, "no argument for deletion".  AfD is for decisions that need admin tools.  RfC is available for such a discussion.  Unscintillating (talk) 02:41, 2 February 2016 (UTC)
Unscintillating (talk) 00:11, 8 February 2016 (UTC)
  • Where in that statement is your support for our WP:5P fundamental principles and our WP:Deletion policy?  Also, let's talk about a real problem, articles without a single source.  Do you oppose moving articles without sources to draftspace?  Unscintillating (talk) 00:18, 19 February 2016 (UTC)
  • You are free to !vote and close AFDs as "delete and draftify" as an alternative to deletion. Here's an example - Wikipedia:Articles for deletion/Tabletop Simulator. WP:5P allows for editors to create articles in the mainspace, removing those from mainspace without process is a lack of respect that contravenes WP:5P4. Editors have never been allowed to soft delete articles, as was explicitly stated in the article incubator process that drafts replace. You're free to WP:IAR all you want, but right now, we don't even have a rule to ignore, because right now "anything goes". - hahnchen 09:06, 19 February 2016 (UTC)
  • @Hahnchen: Right now, the alternative that you just presented cannot happen adequately in WP:AFD's current state. Basically, anyone except the nominator can vote in an AFD discussion with whatever opinion they have, but the nominator has to vote for deletion. If the nominator presents any other option than deletion, the discussion gets closed per "wrong forum". If you want the resolution that you are suggesting, AFD needs to be renamed "Articles for discussion"; otherwise, nominations to move an article to the draft namespace will be closed on sight. Steel1943 (talk) 20:19, 29 February 2016 (UTC)
    • @Steel1943: Nominating to "delete and userfy" is still a delete. - hahnchen 22:04, 29 February 2016 (UTC)
  • @Hahnchen: No, it's not; it's one or the other. Please refer to WP:AFD's opening section: nowhere in there does it state that a nominator can nominate or suggest nominating an article for anything other than deletion. "Delete and userfy" is not deletion: "Delete and userfy" is moving an article out of the article namespace, then deleting the leftover redirect per WP:CSD#R2 ... which retains the contents of the article, although it is now in a different namespace. In WP:AFD's current state, a nomination of "Move to draft namespace" or "userfy (in any form)" being stated by the nominator in the opening nomination gets closed to "wrong forum". Steel1943 (talk) 00:38, 1 March 2016 (UTC)
Of course, the caveat of BRD, which most Yes votes agree on, still applies here. We should not be making Draftification as a substitute for controversial deletions, but I believe BRD covers those cases very well. But at the same time, Draftification is mighty useful for quite a lot of articles that got through AFC (or bypassed it) and might need additional work before it can be added back to namespace.
Soni (talk) 20:07, 24 February 2016 (UTC)
  • A2soup, the issue is what can be done with articles that would *not* be a "Keep" at AfD. I don't think anyone is suggesting that we move to Draft the valid articles that should be kept at main space, which was your concern; yet many of us don't think that archiving invalid articles for reuse should require a full formal deletion process. That heavy process only exist because deleted pages are made out of reach to most editors, which is not a problem with Draft, for which WP:BRD should be enough. Diego (talk) 13:48, 25 February 2016 (UTC)
    • How do you know it's not a keep at AFD? If it's a CSD candidate, sure, draftify it. This RFC doesn't address CSD candidates. If you're just assuming the outcome of a process you haven't initiated, don't. - hahnchen 14:33, 27 February 2016 (UTC)
      • If someone makes a PROD an no one else objects to it on time, it is an automatic deletion. The benefit in moving to Draft instead is that someone else could still see the content later than a week after the first individual decision. Your objection would have a lot more weight if we didn't already have in place one process that can delete articles without discussion, but we have it; moving to Draft is an improvement on that. Diego (talk) 09:30, 28 February 2016 (UTC)
        • I'm fine with expired PRODs being moved into Draft space, like any other CSD candidate. PROD isn't an individual decision, it's a process, and anyone seeing a PROD tag can remove it, including anonymous editors, you're likely to get more hits in one week in the mainspace then you will 6 months in draftspace. Compare Bjørn Lynne with Draft:Bjørn Lynne. - hahnchen 22:42, 29 February 2016 (UTC)
          • So maybe what we need is a version of PROD to request that the article is moved to draft if there is no opposition, rather than deleted. This should solve the concerns of those that oppose a direct move from article space to draft without discussion. Diego (talk) 22:54, 29 February 2016 (UTC)
  • @Hahnchen: Can you point me to where in AFD's instructions this is explicitly stated? Steel1943 (talk) 00:40, 1 March 2016 (UTC)
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.

Reviewer set thresholds and repeated submissions

In at least two cases at the top of MfD are cases where well fleshed looking drafts have been repeatedly submitted and rejected. I would like to support AfC reviewers against repeated submissions of unimproved drafts, but cannot where the reviewers expectations are higher than that found at AfD.

I suggest if a draft is repeatedly submitted without addressing reviewer points, that you apply a different template that tells how to move to mainspace, and warns of AfD. --SmokeyJoe (talk) 22:12, 3 March 2016 (UTC)

sometimes that is indeed the case, (and in fact I just moved one of the articles being discussed there to mainspace, because it will clearly meet the relevant notability ). But usually it's quite otherwise--the article is altogether hopeless, and MfD is the simplest way to handle it, rather than going through the additional bureaucracy of first accepting it and then deleting it. There is general agreement that at least an article must be likely to pass at afd before accepting the afc, but trying to quantitate it is difficult. Some think it's just enough to be >50%, I'd say it has to be >66%, but in practice I see that almost everything I accept has remained in WP. The place for articles to be improved is in mainspace, where everybody can see and work on them. Many afc rejects are improperly demanding, but it does serve a useful process in screening out most of the junk. Most repeated rejections are for good reasons, and the repeated resubmission are by persistent promotional editors.
I don't think we can deal with this by changing formal rules or procedures; we need to change it by educating the people who are declining based on unreasonable expectations. The first step is to get more good and experienced people to review the drafts. But if we do change anything, it should perhaps be a more liberal use of G11 on AfCs. DGG ( talk ) 10:34, 6 March 2016 (UTC)
That is all quite agreeable. Persistent repeated resubmission by persistent promotional editors should indeed lead to G11 tagging.
In practice I see that almost everything I accept has remained in WP. You probably have a better eye than most. I suspect that many are trying for the same thing, and the easiest way to achieve it is by being demanding. Is there a way to find articles deleted at AfD that were approved at AfC? I think most reviewers should have a few such articles. --SmokeyJoe (talk) 05:52, 14 March 2016 (UTC)

Drafts with disallowed titles

I have undone this edit by CasetteTapeMaster (talk · contribs), suggesting that drafts with disallowed titles should be named "Wikipedia:Draft:<something>" (Examples Wikipedia:Draft:௨, Wikipedia:Draft:তেলুগু ভাষা). I don't think this is a good idea, as such pages will be missed by the usual processes that work in the Draft namespace. Better advice, I think, would be to create a page in the Draft namespace with an allowed title, with a note to the reviewer of the intended mainspace title. -- John of Reading (talk) 08:14, 3 April 2016 (UTC)

Moving Userspace drafts into Draftspace or Mainspace

According to https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Wikipedia:Drafts moves from Userspace to Draft or Mainspace are permitted.

"Drafts of Wikipedia articles may be stored in the "Draft" namespace. They allow new articles to be developed before being moved to Wikipedia's mainspace... Editors may also create draft pages in their userspace instead if they so prefer." Therefore Userspace drafts are also Drafts.

"Anyone, including users who are not logged in, may create and edit drafts."[1] with instructions for creating them in Draft and Userspace.

"An article created in draftspace does not belong to the editor who created it, and any other registered user can decide that it is done and can be published. " and "Editors may also optionally submit drafts for review via the articles for creation process." Therefore any registered editor can move it, nominate to delete, submit to AfC etc.

"Drafts are meant to be works in progress, and most will not meet Wikipedia's standards for quality at first." There is an expectation that they be brought up to the standards of quality at some point though.

Legacypac (talk) 03:15, 26 March 2016 (UTC)


Wikipedia:Drafts is not a policy or a guideline. The guideline Wikipedia:User pages says that user space drafts can be moved to Draft space "if the original author no longer wants them or appears to have stopped editing". I wouldn't feel comfortable in moving a user space draft where the user is still active unless (1) I asked the user and he/she agreed, or (2) the user submitted the page to AfC and it was declined. This is presuming, of course, that the page isn't eligible for deletion (copyright, promotional, hoax, web host, etc.)—Anne Delong (talk) 04:31, 26 March 2016 (UTC)

Yes, I am not mainly concerned with active users, but long gone ones. However, if one wanted to write up an article on Widgets and found a good draft already existed in an active user's userspace, it would be fine to go edit the draft and promote it. Why would anyone object and on what grounds? Legacypac (talk) 15:46, 6 April 2016 (UTC)

Template:Find sources AFD

Idea:

As nearly all drafts have issues with sourcing, how about we modify ((Draft article)), which I understand should be added to the top of every draft, to include ((Find sources AFD)), which of all the templates that assist in find sources looks to be the best. --SmokeyJoe (talk) 06:28, 6 April 2016 (UTC)

Sounds great. This will encourage proper sourcing and make life easier. I see no downside. Legacypac (talk) 15:42, 6 April 2016 (UTC)

Proposed for Template:Draft article and Template:Userspace draft. --SmokeyJoe (talk) 06:59, 7 April 2016 (UTC)
I don't get it Template:Draft article already includes Template:Find sources.--TriiipleThreat (talk) 10:01, 7 April 2016 (UTC)

precedence: existing drafts vs. new mainspace articles

Is there an established precedent for one taking precedence? One of the reasons I like the draftspace vs. a sandbox is that it makes work more "findable". There have been times that people have expressed to me that they were concerned about working in the Drafts space because someone who's more hasty could create another version of the same article in mainspace in the meantime and they wouldn't get "credit" for it. Credit, as with ownership, is a touchy thing on Wikipedia, but this seems like a reasonable concern. My assumption has generally been that if a draft exists (with usable content) and someone else creates the mainspace article, then we would treat it as though the draft were an existing article and someone else created another article on the same topic (i.e. we would merge the new article to the old one and redirect). In practice, that doesn't seem to be the way it works, and I was surprised not to be able to find guidance on this page.

An example which led me here: someone created Draft:Mary Patten on 3/6. Two days later, someone created Mary Patten about the same subject. The new one had a little more content than the old (I say that and also ask to what extent that matters). Another editor then merged some of the content from the draft into the article and nominated the draft for deletion. The MfD was closed as redirect. It seems an ideal solution would be a history merge, but I admit I don't have a great sense of when that's possible. If that were out of the question, I would have assumed that because the Draft predated the article, it would be the one kept. If there is no such precedent, what are the variables involved? Quality? Default to the article? What if e.g. we have a 5-year-old very good draft and a new really lousy article?

To be clear, I'm not contesting the MfD -- just trying to figure out if we have best practices written down somewhere (and if not, what it should say). — Rhododendrites talk \\ 21:20, 4 May 2016 (UTC)

Generally if the two creations are similar to any extent, the earliest should take precedence, and then just request a hist merge if that needs to happen. And if a draft has been stewing for a while and someone decides to up and create the article, there may have been a good reason why the draft was being crafted for that long (ie film article drafts can't move to the mainspace until production starts per WP:NFF), so in a case like that, judgement should be used if the article contents should merge into the draft, or just be deleted. - Favre1fan93 (talk) 21:28, 4 May 2016 (UTC)

RfC: is there a deadline for a draft?

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 suppose this question has probably asked before but I'm asking it anyway (philosophers will lose jobs if they are not allowed to do so.) So, are there deadlines for pages in the draft namespace? I thought there isn't one and some agree but some other disagree; cf. Wikipedia:Miscellany for deletion/Draft:Moduli stack of elliptic curves.

We might be able to agree that, say, a 90% complete draft can stay in the draft namespace; for example, the author is a perfectionist and doesn't want to move it to the main namespace unless it's really really complete. I think articles like that can and should stay in the draft namespace. What about one sentence page? A page with only outlines? If there are potentials for them to become main-namespace articles (e.g., passes notability), then I'm of the opinion that drafts like those can and should stay in the draft namespace. Because, why delete?, which is simply a counterproductive action. In my personal case, I'm in the middle of finishing my Ph.D. thesis and have no time to develop some of very-short drafts but I don't want them to be deleted (since I need to recreate them later.) Why must those drafts be deleted? For what end?

-- Taku (talk) 00:26, 24 March 2016 (UTC)

Wrong question The better question to ask is Is deliberately going out to claim "creation" credit by creating draft namespace pages below the standard of even a stub a use of draft namespace that is endorsed by community consensus. You created most of these back in 2014 (and in some cases with the only content being 2 references). IF these are truly notable, they will be recreated and the user who actually makes real effort to getting it to something that can be accepted. Hasteur (talk) 02:13, 24 March 2016 (UTC)
Also, even in other namespaces, the already established policy (WP:STUB and Wikipedia:Arbitration/Requests/Case/Doncram#Minimum_standard_for_stub_articles) dictates that you just can't leave these abandoned and not above the minimum level of even a stub. Our argument that Draft:Moduli stack of elliptic curves at this level is acceptable is a farce and an affront to all the editors who are using the space correctly. Hasteur (talk) 02:21, 24 March 2016 (UTC)
See also Draft:Quillen metric by the same editor. Hasteur (talk) 03:01, 24 March 2016 (UTC)
There is no reason to "expire" drafts otherwise, especially not when they are on recognised notable topics. Nor is the complete absence of content a drawback, if they merely contain notes or useful references. They are not "in the way".
Nor. on the other hand, should stale drafts be seen as a hindrance to other editors moving forwards. A "creator" (dreadful idea) does not get to claim WP:OWNership of a place in the namespace unless they did actually get round to writing the article. But discouraging this doesn't require deletion. One could even claim, quite reasonably, that a draft with the only text "Here's a couple of useful refs for anyone who has the time to write that I obviously haven't" is still an encouragement to collegial editing and so has value.
If something is "private drunken scribblings", then it should be removed (as text, not necessarily by deleting a whole page) because that content is wrong. I hope the implication isn't that noting down refs is no better than "drunken scribblings". Andy Dingley (talk) 16:33, 24 March 2016 (UTC)
potential is what matters, not age. --SmokeyJoe (talk) 22:06, 24 March 2016 (UTC)

@User:TakuyaMurata I don't think the usefulness declines but the chance the user will improve it does the older it gets. There are exceptions of course for time sensitive topics. A stale draft about an album set for release in 2010, or a future election in 2012 (being checked in 2016) has become useless. Legacypac (talk) 21:13, 28 March 2016 (UTC)

Agree with this. Articles with strong promotional motivation, bands, albums, for-profit-companies should be treated more sternly than others. WP:CRYSTAL drafting is perfectly OK, but once the then-future date passes, sources should then be strong and if they are not then it is probably best deleted (or archived?). Potential is what matters. --SmokeyJoe (talk) 21:23, 28 March 2016 (UTC)
I also agree that Legacypac has made an important point. There are some news-y articles and drafts that become less interesting as time goes by. I believe, since Wikipedia is not a news site, such time sensitive topics should not be covered in the first place, regardless of namespaces. (I know people still create such pages all the time, though). I don't think the deadlines are a way to handle them; it's a poor approach at best. -- Taku (talk) 03:22, 29 March 2016 (UTC)
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 for proposed draftspace deletions

There is an RFC at Wikipedia:Village_pump_(policy)#RfC:_Proposed_draftspace_deletion about a policy to allow for proposed deletion of old draftspace drafts. -- Ricky81682 (talk) 21:44, 20 May 2016 (UTC)

Archived unclosed at Wikipedia:Village_pump_(policy)/Archive_128#RfC:_Proposed_draftspace_deletion. --SmokeyJoe (talk) 06:54, 15 June 2016 (UTC)

Expanding U5 to draftspace?

This is not an RfC; just a general gauging of opinion. Usually, the standards for inclusion in the draftspace are higher than in the userspace. Based on that, it seems to make sense to expand U5 to the draftspace. Opinions on that? ~ RobTalk 04:27, 11 June 2016 (UTC)

Rob, I find this tricky. Keep it general, and people don't follow. Make it specific, and small mistakes kill the whole idea. Trying...

CSD Description of criterion Corresponding action for DraftSpace
A1 No context Editorially replace with an explanatory template. Your draft had no context.
A2 Foreign language articles that exist on another Wikimedia project. Editorially soft redirect to the article on the other project
A3 No content Ignore. No action at all required.
A5 Transwikied articles Editorially soft redirect to the article on the other project
A7 No indication of importance (individuals, animals, organizations, web content, events) Speedy delete if promotional, a weaker promotion test than G11 if the author is a drive-by contributor, similar to U5
A9 No indication of importance (musical recordings) Speedy delete if promotional, a weaker promotion test than G11 if the author is a drive-by contributor, similar to U5
A10 Recently created article that duplicates an existing topic. Editorially (soft) redirect to the mainspace title. No need for "recent".
A11 Obviously invented. Similar to G3 (hoax) but less strict. Editorially blank with an explanatory template. eg. Wikipedia articles must be based on reliable sources.
For all of them, actions shouldn't be made hastily. Give the user some time, definitely many minutes, probably a week.
Probably, all users submitting drafts of any kind, good or bad, should be welcomed. The welcome template provides links that are very helpful to newcomers. --SmokeyJoe (talk) 09:08, 15 June 2016 (UTC)


Accidental content forks in Draftspace

On the A10 case for draftspace, accidental content forks, the options would be:

(1) Speedy delete them; or
(2) Take them individually to MfD; or
(3) Redirect the redundant to draft to the viable mainspace title.
(3a) Replace with a soft redirecting template that explains that the topic appears to be already covered in mainspace, with advice on what to do if that is not actually true, such is if a spinout is being attempted, or title disambiguation is needed
(4) Ignore them, leave them as they are, or (4a) blank

I support (3) or (3a), followed by (1) (weak oppose, administratively heavy overkill for unimportant draftspace) and strongly opposing (2). (4) is what most people do. (4a) probably confuses, making (3) or (3a) better. --SmokeyJoe (talk) 09:13, 15 June 2016 (UTC)

U5 has had a lot of poor nominations that cover a lot of real draft attempts, so I would prefer not to have this for drafts as well. But some of the other things are appropriate to delete quickly, eg a dump of phone numbers. If there is an inappropriate outing or disclosure of information I am happy to speedy delete that without a clear criterion, but perhaps oversighting applies anyway. On the topic of content forks it is best to understand why they exist. If an accident then a redirect/merge may be appropriate. But they may be a way to work on an article outside of article space. Graeme Bartlett (talk) 11:15, 15 June 2016 (UTC)

What's the consensus on STALE drafts to AfC without the author's permission?

What's the consensus on adding STALE drafts to AfC without the author's permission? I ask this because while looking through the list of stale drafts, I sometimes come across a few viable drafts that if were added to AfC, more editors would take note of and possibly improve. Anarchyte (work | talk) 11:26, 20 June 2016 (UTC)

I think the result was, not conclusive, but I dare say that if done in good faith it is a good thing to do. You must honestly believe that others will likely be able to improve on the draft.
There was the question of how old is "stale"? See Wikipedia_talk:User_pages#Should_old_user_space_drafts_have_an_expiration_date.3F. There is no limit per se.
I think "stale" is a bad word, different things go stale at different rates. I think the author being inactive 6 months might be the minimum. I think you should be sure to leave a note on the author's talk page explaining what you are doing. A human-worded note. Even if inactive at editing, many still lurk, and some even have activated email notification of talk page edits. --SmokeyJoe (talk) 13:19, 20 June 2016 (UTC)
  • "Both the editor and the page has to be inactive for at least a year" is a good measure of inactive, for a draft. Please can we move away from that work stale?
  • Head gaskets tend to blow most often when putting too much power through a cold engine. The message, directed particularly at you, is to discuss before embarking on major changes, more than that the major change was a bad idea. --SmokeyJoe (talk) 04:07, 21 June 2016 (UTC)

Tagging drafts

Ideas for categorizing by tags in subsections below. --SmokeyJoe (talk) 07:48, 21 June 2016 (UTC)

Promising draft

Add this tag to a draft that appears promising. The tag would would autocategorise, and this will help editors find worthy drafts to work. Please check to see if the topic is already covered in mainspace. --SmokeyJoe (talk) 07:48, 21 June 2016 (UTC)

No-hope draft, Non-starter draft

Drafts that are hopeless, whether they have no content, or no serious content, or the topic is something made up, or trivial, etc, especially where the author was a drive-by short term editor or IP, blank the whole page, including any AfC tags, replacing with ((Non-starter draft)).

This tag will auto-categorise there hopeless drafts, removing them from other maintenance categories. When there are enough of them, propose the hole list for deletion at MfD. This will allow for a cursory review of the tagged drafts, allowing the community to check that the draft reviewing taggers are tagging reasonably. This tagging system may be consideration a variation on Draft-Prod, but the difference being that deletion is not automatic, not at first anyway. These group nominations may even help identify patterns that may demand more sophisticated responses. --SmokeyJoe (talk) 07:48, 21 June 2016 (UTC)

Draft soft redirect

Many drafts are accidental content forks. These are made as newbie mistakes, the newcomer thought they had an idea for an article topic, but failed to discover that the topic is already covered, whether as a stand alone whole article, or within an article. The soft redirect will be informative to the author, and to anyone else in future about to make the same newbie mistake.

A ((Draft soft redirect)) would be modelled on Template:Soft redirect, or could be a modification of that template using a new parameter. The soft redirect should point to the article or article section containing the template, and would also provide some text stating that the draft in the history of the redirect appears to be redundant to content already in mainspace, that that editors should improve existing content where it is. --SmokeyJoe (talk) 07:48, 21 June 2016 (UTC)

General discussion

I'd prefer to have ((NOTWEBHOST draft)) separately, or to advise that NOTWEBHOST violating drafts should go straight to MfD. I have never objected to MfD nominations citing a valid NOTWEBHOST issue. The problem is with the many drafts that are not specific NOTWEBHOST, but just plain hopeless. --SmokeyJoe (talk) 08:01, 21 June 2016 (UTC)
I think that's where the rub is; I believe NOTWEBHOST applies to hopeless drafts. In the April RfC, the majority of the community agreed with me (question A3, if I remember the number right). ~ RobTalk 08:09, 21 June 2016 (UTC)
Let's flesh that out. A hopeless draft, what line in policy, at WP:NOT, does it violate? Question A3 was particularly frustrating, to consensus building, because it confused a guideline, WP:GNG, from WP:N, a special case of WP:NOR, WP:PSTS specifically, with WP:NOTWEBHOST. The question was posed in terms of the GNG, and you began the trend and answering in terms of NOTWEBHOST. A non sequiter; a logical fallacy.
Consider, for example, a long dead historic supercentenarian. We have her name, address, date of birth, date of death and no more. Such a subject is well agreed to fail the WP:GNG, WP:N. There are no secondary sources (not just not in the article, but not in current existence) to satisfy WP:PSTS. Any attempt to write prose to flesh out a paragraph on the subject violates WP:NOR. The subject is not plausibly notable. However, there is nothing under WP:NOT proscribing coverage of supercentenarians. Consequently, the material is suitable for a merge.
WP:NOT is clearer, easier, and more stern. Anything violating WP:NOT is not allowed on Wikipedia, is not allowed in any namespace. Small exceptions (eg memorials of Wikipedians) are written directly into the policy.
Anything definitely violating WP:NOT should be deleted promptly. MfD is used to confirm the facts, and it is usually clear cut.
Hopeless drafts, no plausible chance of meeting the GNG, are typically newcomer tests, mistakes or misconceptions, but are not deliberate misuses. An important point is that there is no clear cut differentiations between the hopeless, the plausible, and the mergable. Indeed, many times someone has nominated for deletion alleging non-plausible draft, and then someone discovers the topic is already covered in mainspace, proving, de facto, that the nominator was incompetent at judging notability. Wikipedia-notability is complicated. Don't make it worse by confusing WP:N with WP:NOTWEBHOST. --SmokeyJoe (talk) 10:54, 21 June 2016 (UTC)
Which of those do you consider genuine and important questions? --SmokeyJoe (talk) 09:19, 22 June 2016 (UTC)
I'll let that go and work within your suggestions instead. Why don't you start by creating drafts for those templates in your userspace? There's no reason they have to be red links and we can move them later. I'd still suggest putting this under the guise of the Abandoned Drafts wikiproject. I don't think we should treat it as if there's a overall "Drafts" review project, especially for evaluating pages. Mainspace is still tagged by wikiprojects so the Abandoned Drafts project could incorporate your templates as part of its potential tagging if you'd like that. The front side has the template while the back is the low potential tag if you need a front-side tag. If we redid that project to add both the date reviewed and the potential parameter into say a Category:Low-potential WikiProject Abandoned Drafts from June 2016, and then considered review of these for the future, then I'd probably just shut up entirely with MFD and prods and whatnot and deal with all of this. -- Ricky81682 (talk) 21:40, 28 June 2016 (UTC)
In fact, could your proposed template:non-starter draft essentially be ((Abandoned Drafts|date=July 2016|potential=low)) or whatever? This would be on the talk page but the exact wording for the template can be adjusted by potential so low-potential ones say something different than mid or high ones. Would kill two birds with one stone. -- Ricky81682 (talk) 21:44, 28 June 2016 (UTC)
Ricky81682, that sounds sensible. I hesitate at "potential=low". My intention is that everything tagged "non-starter draft", after a while, after at least a group cursory review, will be deleted, sooner or later. (maybe via MfD everytime there is more than 100, some tools may be required). "potential=low" reads as is there is some potential, and noting that there are no time limits, if the potential is slowly developing into substance, this will derail the deletion of the no hopers.
I think, correct me if I am wrong, that drafts that are easily agreed to have "no potential" represent the vast bulk of the cruft that should be deleted. --SmokeyJoe (talk) 00:35, 29 June 2016 (UTC)
We can rename it however you want. We can break it even further, the low/mid/high was a start to this idea but we can add a NS for non-starter category (if the editor returns, that's not as "harsh" as no potential). Like I said, if we combine it with the dates, it's not difficult to have a bot pull a report of say the non-starter drafts from a year that haven't been edited in that year and prepare a clean MFD. -- Ricky81682 (talk) 00:46, 29 June 2016 (UTC)
I would like to start with NS / Non-Starter / no-hope for a category that gets routinely deleted. The tagger should assert "no potential", or at least "no potential in the current material". It should cater for stuff that is nearly content free, no sources, looks made up, looks like a test, is about the author's activities in college, etc. Maybe it should require that the author is was never a productive mainspace editor.
Could we change "low/mid/high" to "no/some/promising"-potential? I think there is advantage to the human newcomer. "No potential" is pretty clear, "low potential" leaves wriggle room. 'Promising" implies almost but not there. Assessed as "High potential" to me means that it should be moved to mainspace now.
NB. This is not intended for anything that violates any explicit part of WP:NOT, WP:NOTPROMOTION especially. These things should be MfD-ed or G11-ed immediately. --SmokeyJoe (talk) 01:25, 29 June 2016 (UTC)
@SmokeyJoe: If we agree to move this to the project, I say we move this discussion to Wikipedia talk:WikiProject Abandoned Drafts and continue it there. I think the proposal is fine, but as I said before, it seems like it's starting over for something that's we already have a partial start on. -- Ricky81682 (talk) 17:40, 29 June 2016 (UTC)
Probably, although I am not sure what we have agreed, and what was already started there. I consider this has been about constraining what has been going on in the name of that WikiProject. I think we have started agreeing on concepts of how to work, and I am very happy to adjust to your details. --SmokeyJoe (talk) 08:45, 1 July 2016 (UTC)
There are other factors that need work, but this would be useful when it comes to articles that are spared from deletion by admins (or other editors) that see promise - only for said draft to get ignored and eventually G13'd because it didn't get the TLC it needed. Tokyogirl79 (。◕‿◕。) 10:22, 27 June 2016 (UTC)