On Wed, Sep 30, 2009 at 6:36 AM, Ken Arromdee <[email protected]> wrote: > On Tue, 29 Sep 2009, George Herbert wrote: >> > "Verifiability, not truth" means that sometimes we'll put in something >> > that's >> > verifiable but isn't true. >> "Verifyable, but untrue" - where there's evidence to disprove but it's >> not compellingly better quality data than the untrue data - is the >> hard case. Either walk the narrow line and present both or pick one >> and defend using it, staying aware that more info may clarify the >> situation into the first case above. > > The problem is that the data may actually be better quality (by non- > Wikipedian standards) but not verifiable by Wikipedia standards. (Like the > case of the bridge which was said in a source to have no traffic, and > someone visited it and saw it has traffic. You could make up far-fetched > scenarios of why the reliable source could still be correct, but it's far > more likely that none of those scenarios are and that the source is simply > wrong.)
I believe that primary source evidence, including Wikipedian fact checking (that they then publish somewhere, i.e. a video on YouTube etc) would count for impugning the reliability of a source where the source is demonstrated wrong. Sources which appear reliable - written by people who should know what they're doing, published with fact checking by reputable publishers, etc. - have a presumption of reliability and accuracy. But that's rebuttable. Once a valid concern about its accuracy is raised, if you can demonstrate it's not reliable, it's out. Presumption rebutted. On the bridge example, at the very least it can demonstrate that the statement in the book of no traffic was not currently true, though it might have been at the time of the book's publication. Some people object to such rebuttals and feel that Wikipedians should not make judgement calls on whether the sources are reliable. Those people are wrong. There is plenty of crap information out there in apparently reliable sources. WP:RS is not a suicide pact - appearances are sometimes deceiving, and we have a complete freedom to investigate and throw out sources. -- -george william herbert [email protected] _______________________________________________ WikiEN-l mailing list [email protected] To unsubscribe from this mailing list, visit: https://lists.wikimedia.org/mailman/listinfo/wikien-l
