User talk:Grayfell/Archive 3

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Hi, your edits

I am trying to understand your comment "Way too promotional in tone" for Baba Hari Dass; I'm person who recently did updates and included new info. As far as your comment goes, I compare Baba Hari Dass to Vivekananda's article. That article is more acclamatory than my in tone. The difference is that Vivekananda is no longer alive and so after some leader’s death his statue tends to be viewed even more positively than before, gets promoted by default. So, to make it short, if you can give an example of more balanced approach than "way too promotional in tone", I’ll consider changes. Thanks.Pradeepwb (talk) 04:53, 25 June 2014 (UTC)

Hello, User:Pradeepwb. Thank you for editing. I'll try my best to explain it.
It's not always useful to compare two different articles on Wikipedia, for a variety of reasons (WP:OTHERSTUFFEXISTS is an essay that explains some of them).
That said, Vivekananda's article has hundreds of sources --most of which are WP:SECONDARY, meaning they were not written by him or his immediate associates. Most of the info you have added is primary, meaning it is from Baba Hari Dass's own writing. This makes it very hard to tell what is WP:DUE weight, and what it not.
In addition, you made a number of statements about Baba Hari Dass that talked about his beliefs and practices in a way that is not from a neutral point of view. For example, you described mauna as being helpful for developing concentration. Yes, it may be helpful, but not everybody agrees on that. Wikipedia article's are not just for people who agree with the content, they are for everybody. Since not everybody believes that mauna (for example) is helpful, Wikipedia should not say so. Instead, we explain say who describes it as being helpful, and we should give a reliable source while we're at it.
One more thing, you have used some WP:PEACOCK words. Saying things like "mastered" "acumen" "rich in ancient lore" "enthralled" etc. These are words that imply something very positive about him, but don't really explain in enough detail.
In summary:
  1. WP:SECONDARY Please try to use more sources from people who are not closely associated with Baba Hari Dass
  2. WP:NPOV Write for everybody, not just people who share your beliefs
  3. WP:PEACOCK Try to use neutral, formal words that clearly explain what you mean
I hope that's helpful. Grayfell (talk) 05:59, 25 June 2014 (UTC)

regarding WP:SECONDARY

I'll pay more attention to secondary sources; those could be citations from books, articles, etc; more specifically is it ok to shorten URL for JSTOR citations, or Google Books? Those URLs are cumbersome and long, so might be good idea to use short URL format; but if Google's URL short/URL is blacklisted that wouldn't work. Pradeepwb (talk) 02:39, 29 June 2014 (UTC)

Regarding Your Comments On my Page

More update - "They may roughly 2.5% commission on sales they make personally, but are encouraged to recruit more sellers in subsequent "Generations." - This 2.5% is not accurate at all either. It is not stated in the compensation plan anywhere. It needs to be taken out.

The income disclosure statement should be included in a pay-structure page to clarify what all this is. Its not promotion, its clarity about what it actually is!

--

I know you are trying to uphold the standard of wikipedia, but I am deeply troubled by the current article and the reverting of the revisions I made. As it stands the article is completely inaccurate, outdated, and clearly written by people who are against the company. The wikipedia page as it stands now was obviously written by people critical of Young Living and who actually have very little actual experience with the company.

I understand some of your comments, but the page as it stands is confusing people instead of clarifying it.

I made some of these edits with factually incorrect information and you reverted them. For example, there are 2 errors in the following statement:

"The products are sold by independent distributors, who purchase them from the Young Living Farms in Utah and Idaho." - This is NOT true. Independent distributors Do Not, as a general rule, sell products. They help people set up accounts and those people buy the products they want. They CAN sell products, but most of them don't. So this incorrect to have.

The other error is that all the products do not come from farms in Utah or Idaho. This is horrendously outdated. They now have 9 farms that they own and operate themselves, and partner with dozens of other farms. Why did you not leave this information in my edit?

Every single thing in the following passages have a problem with it:

"Various medical claims are made throughout Young Living's marketing materials, extolling the virtues of their product line for the alleviation of a variety of medical symptoms.[citation needed]"

They are a wellness company, I don't see why this statement should be here. There are medically backed scientific evidence for every single one of their claims. This statement makes it seem to come out of thin air.

"Users of Young Living's products claim they can be used to treat several health conditions.[3] Some customers have used the products as an unproven treatment for the symptoms of Parkinsons Disease.[4]"

I cited an article that showed evidence for the prevention and reversing of parkinson's disease, and you reversed it. Showing that the above statement was factually incorrect.

"Other sources have been more critical of Young Living's efficacy in medical treatment. A 2001 study published in the Journal of Essential Oil Research, which included the company's founder as an author, failed to find any antimicrobial effect for the majority of 73 tested essential oils.[5] A student at Harvard University noted Young Living for their unsubstantiated claims about the toxicity of sodium lauryl sulfate in a 2000 student paper.[6]"

I am floored that you kept this statement of an incredibly OLD study IN the article, while after I cited many articles to the contrary, you left them out.

I then cited a review article that cited over 100s of articles on the therapeutic potential of essential oils... This article refutes every ridiculous claim on the wikipedia page and has a high value for wikipedia sources being areview article... but you took it out.

The article is: - It is one of the best out there, and it absolutely deserves to be on that page. http://erbeofficinali.org/dati/nacci/studi/gli%20olii%20essenziali%20.pdf

Futhermore, The company has actively participated in conservation efforts, received awards worldwide, and has achieved public endorsement from celebrities and spiritual figures. These same article headlines are on other wikipedia articles - why is all the sudden not allowed on this one?

Why is it that negative and skeptical information is considered "encyclopedic" but these positive phenomena and evidence based defenses of what they are saying is considered "promotion?" That is ridiculous! It is about balance and correct portraying of a company.

I also don't understand why you took out the mission statement. That is also on many other wikipedia entries for companies.

Right now the article is an incredibly lopsided, out of date, and a thoroughly INACCURATE portrayal of the company. It needs massive revision.

I know you were attempting to hold integrity in your revisions, and I would like to hold that high standard, however, right now the article is a mess and doesn't at all portray the company as it actually is today. In my eyes, this is exactly the opposite of what wikipedia is supposed to be about. So please inform me as to how I can help update this, balance the information so it includes true positive things, and clean it up in a good way.

Tpmeli (talk) 22:19, 16 August 2014 (UTC)Thomas

I didn't remove the mission statement. Perhaps you should take a closer look at the edits I made. If you would like to incrementally change the article, that's a good idea, but your edits mixed too much promotional 'puff' in with the good. To put it bluntly, the overall problems with your edit were severe enough that I felt I needed to revert, rather than try and disentangle the good from the bad.
We agree that there is a lot of improvement that needs to be done to the article. The way to do that is by taking it slow and with a firm understanding how Wikipedia works. I reverted many of your edits because I did not believe they were neutral or consistently sourced. These are core principles Wikipedia.
As for awards, many, many companies donate to charity and receive awards, because of this, we need reliable, secondary sources about those activities to establish WP:DUE weight. As an example, I've seen awards listed on pages that turned out to be self-given. The way we keep that kind of silliness off of a page is by making sure the sources are reliable, and the awards are noteworthy. It's not a matter of if the company has actually received those awards, it's a matter of weight and perspective. I remind you again, Wikipedia is not a platform for promotion.
The claims you were making about Young Living were way, way too broad. If such revolutionary discoveries have been made about essential oils, they should be mentioned on the article about essential oils first, and they need very, very good sources, which you have not provided. If you do not understand why those sources don't meet WP:RS and WP:MEDRS, I would be happy to break it down for you, but please read-over those pages first.
As for the statement about who actually sells the products, that ties in with the fairly messy definition of multi-level marketing. To someone who is an impartial observer, how, exactly, is "helping someone set up an account" different from acting as a salesperson? The lead is not a good place to go over inventory management or who runs the credit cards. If you would like to rephrase it, by all means do so, but please keep it neutral and concise. Grayfell (talk) 23:00, 16 August 2014 (UTC)

Hi Grayfell. Thanks for your time, This clarifies things a bit for me and I can understand what you wrote. In light of keeping things slow, I'd like to address one thing at a time:

The main thing I feel uneasy around is saying that the science is somehow controversial or the review article I cited didn't meet the standards. Did you look at this? http://erbeofficinali.org/dati/nacci/studi/gli%20olii%20essenziali%20.pdf

The article above, which is a wide ranging review citing over 100+ articles itself should show that it is not in any way controversial in the scientific community that terpenoids in essential oils have wide ranging and consistent therapeutic effects. Whether people know about this or not is a distinct matter. Monoterpenoids in essential oils have been researched for their anti-carcinogenic properties since the 1970's.

The article above meets all the standards I can see in the WP:RS and WP:MEDRS pages and I remain confused about why it wouldn't be accepted on this page.

I don't understand why it is ok to put that they are making unsubstantiated claims (which actualy have rigorous evidence based support) is allowed, but this article seems off? How is that neutral?

To be seen and understood. I have people coming to me everyday asking about this wikipedia article and it is a complete waste of time for me to spend hours each week dispelling misunderstandings that issue from it. While I would like to take things slow, the article is simply completely misleading and inaccurate and it is sending the wrong message to people consistently enough to warrant either taking it down or cleaning it up more swiftly. — Preceding unsigned comment added by Tpmeli (talkcontribs) 01:10, 17 August 2014 (UTC)

Okay, well, first of all, if people are coming to you about this article, it's presumably because you're involved in Young Living. If that's the case, please read about having a conflict of interest. This is a serious concern. Past experience and Wikipedia's emphasis on neutrality both lead to a fairly poor view of editors who are involved in commercial activities editing articles about those activities. Have patience, otherwise you may very well be banned from editing. Hopefully it won't come to that, but that's up to you.
Regarding the review article, as I said, the radical claims you added to the article need to be backed up by solid, secondary sources. The review article merely outlines past research, and suggests that more research should be done. At no point does it actually claim that essential oils are proven, valid treatments for Parkinson's Disease! Yes, they may have certain useful properties, but essential oils are not a widely accepted treatment, and their effectiveness is still very much up for debate. This is why directly citing a study is problematic. It's just too easy to find a study, or even a metastudy, that supports a specific POV. If you notice at the top of Essential oil#Pharmacology, there is a banner because this is an ongoing problem. We need more secondary sources to augment the primary sources.
Just as significantly, the review article makes absolutely no mention of Young Living. If this is so significant, why is this not clearly spelled out at essential oil instead of Young Living? This isn't an article about the therapeutic possibilities of essential oils, this is an article about a company that is primarily known for making and selling essential oils. Do you see what I'm getting at? Inserting a bunch of info about essential oils in general (even if it were properly sourced) is promoting the subject without actually providing info about the subject. This is why we use wikilinks, so we don't have to explain how to make a hamburger in every article about a fast-food restaurant. If you cannot find a reliable, secondary source specifically about Young Living, then the content probably should not be in the article. Grayfell (talk) 01:56, 17 August 2014 (UTC)

Yes, I am a distributor for Young Living. I have two points to make about this.

First - I do not see this inherently as a problem, but rather as a resource to clarify the absurd misunderstandings that come from people who are not involved in network marketing, young living, or involved in essential oil research regularly and have very little idea of what they are actually talking about.

Both the MLM wikipedia page, the essential oil page, and the Young Living page were littered with misunderstandings that I can only assume came from people that had no experience in those fields and were looking on with an overly inflated skeptical eye.

Commission structures are not easy to understand, and someone simply reading the commission plan without being involved in the business is likely to have no idea what they are looking at, or how to explain it, or what it actually is.

So when I read (and henceforth corrected) in the "multi-level" marketing section that the "maximum" commission that was given was 8%, this was absolutely incorrect and could only have been written by someone who had no idea what they were looking at. I have edited those sections to reflect how the commission structure actually works. This is NOT promotion, it is simply stating facts about how it actually works.

I do not claim complete neutrality. I love the product, the company, and network marketing. if I need to work on my language being more neutral, I am happy to work on that... but it is important to have people on the inside clarify misunderstandings that are promoted by people who are not involved in these fields writing about the,

Secondly, it is clear to me that the current wikipedia was written by people who clearly are biased against the company. The field of essential oils is very competitive, and Young Living is extremely popular and successful. It would be easy for a competitor to put these things in, and that is exactly what I believe has happened.

So if we are going to talk about conflict of interest against correct information, we have to include this negative smearing that is in every single word in the current article.

I personally don't believe in neutrality. We are all biased. However, what we can do is notice this, own it, and move towards objectivity and clarity. To that I am committed, more than my enjoyment and participation in Young Living. I simply want the correct information on this page and I want a balanced account of who and what Young Living, a better appreciation of the thousands of scientifically studies research papers on the therapeutic efficacy of essential oils, and what network marketing really is (no it isn't a pyramid scheme... but I'll clarify that article later). Thanks for taking the time again to journey with me in clarifying all this.

You wrote: "The review article merely outlines past research, and suggests that more research should be done."

Wikipedia recommends using secondary review articles - Every single review article you will ever read will always review past research and suggest more should be done in areas where further development is exciting. I don't see why your bringing this up is relevant since it is exactly what wikipedia recommends doing.

Re: Parkinson's - I am not claiming it is a treatment for it! I am saying that it isn't true that there is "no substantiation" for the use of essential oils in providing therapeutic action on Parkinson's patients... I was responding to how people tend to interpret this extreme language that "X is unsubstantiated" that it is worthless and not scientifically backed, when this is not the case.

This is really exaggerated legalese and not factually true or scientifically accurate. There are TONS of substantiation and evidence for these these effects, and shouldn't we be able to put "evidence" on a wikipedia page without referring to "proof" - Proof of this stuff won't come for decades. But the evidence is

What I am saying isn't that we can treat anything, that is a medical claim that requires years of clinical trials, etc. What I am saying, and what is uncontroversial is that there is strong evidence-based-research that shows that essential oils have irrefutable, clear, and uncontroversial therapeutic properties which we can take advantage of.

The article even says this in the antioxidant section:

"oils of basil, cinnamon, clove, nutmeg, oregano and thyme have proven radical-scavenging and antioxidant have proven radical-scavenging and antioxidant properties in the DPHH radical assay at room temperature" and then later in that page: "It is clear that essential oils may be considered as potential natural antioxidants."

I am aware the effects in vivo are different than a free radical assay but the in vivo activity of an antioxidant is often correlated with its in vitro activity and so we should intellectually take what we currently know seriously and honor instead of spinning it off as nothing because we haven't completely incontrovertibly proven its efficacy in expensive double blind clinical trials.

The review article suggests that further research is indeed due within several areas, but these mostly involve finding mechanisms, not determining efficacy. We know that essential oils are in general antibacterial, antiviral, and antifungal because they all tend to include similar effective constituents (monoterpenoids) that have a broad range similarity of action. That is absolutely not debated in the clinical aromatherapy world.

What is still needed to research are which oils are most effective at what bacteria, viruses, and fungi. So we need to be clear about what is pretty substantiated, and what isn't.

This is true. I myself would like to see more peer reviewed studies of Young Living oils in particular. I agree with your argument that this should be in the essential oil section unless the study is a study involving Young Living.

I am happy to edit ALL of the articles that are massively in need of revision (MLM, essential oils, and this one)! I only have so many hours in the day and its going to take a while!

I appreciate this journey with you and holding my inspiration to clarify in check. I think together, we can clean this up. You can help me notice my bias coming through and simplify what I write to get to the important points, and my insider expertise can help clarify the misunderstandings that are obviously coming from people who don't know the company or the model well enough to write about it.

I understand that it might make it slightly easier to reply, but please do not reformat my comments in the future. Talk pages should be preserved in chronological order to make them readable by uninvolved editors.
It doesn't matter if you, personally, see your COI as an inherent problem, every experienced editor sees it as a red flag. This issue has been debated to death here, and if you stick around and edit outside of this one subject, you'll understand why. Conflict-of-interest editing on Wikipedia is a good article on why this has been a serious problem in the past, but there are many, many dozens and dozens of pages where this issue has been debated. Suffice it to say, WP:NEUTRALity is what we strive for. It's a policy, and an important one, so if you really feel that you cannot be neutral, you're going to have a very hard time here.
This is an important point: Wikipedia does not require personal familiarity with a subject to edit an article about that subject. In fact, it can sometimes be a stumbling block. That is why we rely on WP:SECONDARY sources. Wikipedia is WP:NOT a blog-hosting platform, if you want a place to discuss your own personal experiences, and to share your personal expertise, there there are better places to do it. Wikipedia requires reliable sources, and rejects original research, likewise, your experiences as a distributor for Young Living does not, in any way, over-ride the need for you to be neutral and rely on solid sources. If reliable sources are negative, so be it, the articles should reflect that. If that's going to be a problem, it's your problem, not Wikipedia's.
There is no meaningful difference between saying that something is a treatment, and suggesting that it has therapeutic effect. If you don't understand this, you should avoid editing articles about medicine at all. We're not a clinical journal, we are a general audience encyclopedia. Wikipedia cannot provide medical advice. WP:MEDICAL. Leave recommendations to professionals. If something has antioxidant properties, we say that and nothing else. We do not, ever synthesis that to imply that a substance has medical applications beyond what sources explicitly state.
That's all beyond the problems that arise from the advice itself. The science is not settled on the benefits of ingesting antioxidants, and in fact, it may be counterproductive.[1] I'm not saying this should be in the article either way, but it highlights why making any sort of health claim needs very clear, direct, secondary sources. Saying "a study says x, which is also shown to affect y, therefore it prevents z" is not just bad for the article, it's abysmally bad science.
Clinical aromatherapy is a small niche that is not yet accepted practice. Aromatherapy makes this clear. These studies are far from resounding endorsements, and should not be treated as such. Grayfell (talk) 04:04, 17 August 2014 (UTC)

We've given alot time to this today. I thank you for that. Let's look at one thing before I go to bed.

You keep undoing my edit about the study. I am really astounded that you don't see how ridiculous the original statement is. So let's look at it in detail.

Original: "Other sources have been more critical of Young Living's efficacy in medical treatment. A 2001 study published in the Journal of Essential Oil Research, which included the company's founder as an author, failed to find any antimicrobial effect for the majority of 73 tested essential oils"

Astounding Problem 1. "Other Sources" - This is not an other source! It is a study published BY GARY YOUNG - the founder of young living HIMSELF et al. Why would this article be portrayed as an outside critical source! Are you kidding me!

Ridiculous Problem 2: "Critical" - Why would an article written by the founder of a company be critical of itself. More nonsense.

Misleading Problem 3: "Failed to find any antimicrobial effect..." - This is incredibly misleading. It portrays the study as signifying that the majority of essential oils don't have antimicrobial effects in general, when in fact the point of the study was to find out WHICH ones have antimicrobial effect against A SPECIFIC strain of bacteria. If you were looking for gold and found it you wouldn't say you "failed to find gold" everywhere else. You'd say what you found and where you found it.

Misleading Problem 4: No actual numbers are written. Just a misleading interpretation.

Misleading Problem 5: The study is not about the antimicrobial potential of essential oils in general. It is about which ones kill a specific bacteria: streptococcus pneumoniae. This is not indicated in any way by the original description.

Misleading Problem 6: the conclusion of the study actually conflicts with the emphasis of the wikipedia comment. The abstract ends: " Essential oils that induce lysis in S. pneumoniae may have potential as an alternative treatment for infections caused by drug resistant pneumococci."

This is the exact OPPOSITE of what the comment seems to portray.

Here is my edit "A 2001 study published in the Journal of Essential Oil Research, which included the company's founder as an author, found potent antimicrobial effect for 3 essential oils, and moderate antimicrobial effect for 15 oils on Streptococcus pneumoniae."

So the original statement is factually incorrect, doesn't have any numbers, is overgeneralizing a claim, and is misleading enough to warrant us actually questioning if the person who wrote it has any understanding of what they were doing... and... somehow, my edit was revoked?

I hope to goodness that NOW you can see how much MORE neutral and factually correct my edit is than the original.

What I have been trying to say is that that whole article has been filled with BS as bad as this.

I'm sure everyone has had bad experiences with C.O.I and that it is important to monitor, but can you really tell me that my edits today have not contributed to clarifying real absolute nonsense that doesn't deserve to be written anywhere, let alone in the world's most famous encyclopedia.

I still hold a vision of us enhancing each others strengths to improve the article. You know the "wiki deal" and seem to make my verbose writing much simpler and clearer. I'm new at wiki editing and just felt frustrated and appalled at this insanity on this page and wanted to do something about it. I'm assuming I know a ton more about Young Living and network marketing than you believe that with your wikipedia experience and my experience with the company and network marketing that we are vastly improving this article.

I thank you for that and hope to continue making this better and better.

If you somehow don't agree with this then let's take it up with a third party besides you and me. I am very confident that this edit is superior and that leaving the original is propagating absolute nonsense that should be stopped immediately. So please let me know where you stand. — Preceding unsigned comment added by Tpmeli (talkcontribs) 05:11, 17 August 2014 (UTC)

I take Wikipedia seriously, and for that reason, I am not interested in helping you promote your business here. Your caviler dismissal of my concerns about your COI doesn't fill me with confidence. As I said, you should not be relying on your expertise alone, and your assumptions about my knowledge about MLM are a distraction, at best. This is not the first time that someone has assumed that, because I'm opposed to advertising on Wikipedia, I must be ignorant about how MLMs work. That is not the case, but let's pretend that it is: Is this company so esoteric and complicated that I need to be enrolled as a distributor in order to understand the business model well enough to write a three paragraph description for Wikipedia? If so, we shouldn't write about it at all, because personal experience is not a reliable source.
The study was simply not a big deal. Between giving the misleading impression that its findings were significant, (which would certainly require much, much better sources) or giving the arguably misleading impression that they didn't find anything worthy of note, I would prefer the latter, and I think Wikipedia's policies agree with me on that. The third option, removing the study entirely, has risen to the top of the heap as my new favorite. Let's just do that. Once again, lacking secondary sources, it should be removed. Grayfell (talk) 06:08, 17 August 2014 (UTC)

Fantastic! I have no desire for you or anyone to promote any business here or advertise. I have no idea why you keep thinking that is what I want. I stated throughout my conversations that my sole intention is to clean up the absurd mess that the article was, not to promote anything.

I am not dismissing COI as unimportant. I am inviting you to reconsider the claim that because someone works with a company that they can't contribute objective information. Obviously COI has contributed to huge problems to wikipedia and you seem sensitive to that. Good, you should be, it protects the integrity of what is here.

But it would be nice to have some acknowledgement of how my contributions have led to correcting misinformation and adding to the vast overall improvement of the article. In its current form, the only thing that I see that needs an update is the doTerra / YL settlement, which I am struggling to find good sources for.

I also do not mean to make personal statements about your knowledge. However, people with knowledge, expertise, or training in a particular field are typically the ones who write entries on it.

It is common sense to me to assume that someone working in an industry would probably know more about it than someone who doesn't. When I read the MLM section and saw that everything from the percentages to the kinds of bonuses were factually incorrect, I concluded that it must have been written by someone who didn't understand it. Can't you tell a wikipedia newbie like me by the errors we make? Well the same is true for MLM compensation plans.

There are common newbie errors that seasoned people simply don't make. And unless people were involved in it, it isn't likely they understand it. The same could be said of a chemist. I would trust an article written on chemistry more by a chemist than someone reading a book about it but with no chemistry experience themselves.

You say that personal experience is not a reliable source. It isn't experience we are talking about here, it is understanding that comes from experience. Unless wikipedia has an explicit policy about this - I fail to see how the amount of time it takes to understand something correctly has any relevance as to whether it should be posted or not.

You claim I am dismissing the relevance of COI, which is not true, I am trying to reverse the negative smearing-infused COI that was everywhere in the article. That has been my main intention from the start, to clean up and provide more neutral language around what was written here. I made the common newbie errors and I appreciate your patience with me as I learn.

Lastly, around the study above - I am concerned that the absurd self-contradicting nature of the statement above was not acknowledged by you. I agree that the study was not a big deal, and don't mind it being removed... But that statement was an absolute mess, and it would be nice to be acknowledged in pointing out all of these errors and contributing to improving the standards of the article.

For me wikipedia is exciting because of the collaboration it makes possible between many different parties and people with different areas of expertise. I remain proud of our contributions...especially since I don't imagine our dialog has been easy or pleasurable for you but I am happy we stuck it through and cleaned up this article.

Sincerely, Tpmeli (talk) 14:17, 17 August 2014 (UTC)tpmeli

One of the core ideas behind Wikipedia is verifiability (WP:V). If you cannot point to other, outside sources in order to explain something, it cannot be verified, and only very rarely belongs in an article. Accuracy is important, but the way we get there is with sources, not original research, not personal opinions, and not synthesizing multiple sources to form a new conclusion.
Drawing from that, your personal experience selling these products is only really valuable to Wikipedia because it means you may be familiar with less common sources. This is a good thing, but it runs right up against your conflict of interest, and the sources are mainly going to be primary, anyway, and only of limited value. Just because something can be verified, doesn't mean it belongs in the article. Besides, Wikipedia has neither the resources, nor the inclination to establish that you are who you say you are.
I don't see the statement about the study as being all that absurd. As I said on the article's talk page, it was a trivial study that made some trivial findings. Overstating the significance of the wording is counterproductive.
The article still needs a large amount of work. There are a lot of gaps. There is nothing about the history of the company, or Gary Young's past, such as his paralysis from a logging accident and recovery, past arrests for unlawful practice of medicine, the clinic in Mexico,[2] etc. The corporate history issues I raised on the talk page are also unanswered. How many distributors are there? How many active distributors are there? What percent make a profit? The article was almost deleted for lack of sources. If you feel that the only thing the article needs is filling in some details about an unflattering lawsuit, then your perspective may be skewed. Grayfell (talk) 21:14, 17 August 2014 (UTC)

Greyfell,

Your first 2 paragraphs I am completely on the same page with you. They were written neutrally and were informative.

However, your last paragraph lost me - why would you assume I thought the only edits the page needed was what I changed? Why do you continue to assert my perception may be skewed because of an assumption you are making and not what I actually think?

I feel truly exhausted with these accusations simply because of my position as a YL distributor. My sole intention is to improve something and contribute to clarity, balance, and neutrality, and what I am getting back from people is all this alarmism around COI. I was recently called a "sock puppet" by Christopher Lolito... Is this really what this community is about?

If I knew that it was going to be this much work and effort to clarify a few misunderstandings and facts, I would have suggested the page simply be deleted and never got involved. I'm close to giving up contributing further and just letting the misinformation on these pages continue further.

To be seen - My first priority was correcting the misinformation on the page. That being mostly done, YES the article does need massive updating and revision, but it is much less urgent to me. It would be fine to have the history in, but let's keep it balanced for god's sake - not 40 things about the company & Gary's mistakes and nothing about their accomplishments and achievements.

I don't understand why we assume that something negative a company does is considered more "newsworthy" than something positive. And anything positive is considered "advertising" or marketing... Without both, how can anyone have a balanced perception of what is? Aren't we redupicating the errors of mass media with its emphasis on negative news everywhere?

You ask for futher information - Two things.

1. I know if I made these edits I would be accused of promoting the company, so I don't see it as my place to make them. I can point you to where you might find that information but I'm exhausted with being accused when I am purely trying to help.

2. I don't know how anyone can find the information you are asking about in secondary sources. They are only available on the company page (the YL income disclosure statement says how much money they make - google it). I saw a recent post that YL is close to 2 million distributors but I have yet to confirm this with a source and wouldn't take the number seriously until I do.

Seeing how my position as a YL distributor seems to delegitimate me in advance - If I continue to edit wikipedia pages, I'm going to suggest edits in the talk pages rather than making them myself so there is more inclusion about the edits.

As for feedback for wikipedia - If the community was going to be this up in arms about COI, then wikipedia should REQUIRE people who are involved in a company to post on the talk page and suggesting edits instead of being able to make edits themselves without knowing the barrage of accusations that are likely to follow.

It seems my position as a YL distributor is making it difficult for me to contribute in the way I'd hoped and I'm exhausted with trying to explain myself to correct blatant lies and errors.

You have been mostly kind and patient Greyfell, but this community seems burdened by paranoia that I really don't have time to deal with. I'm going to let this air out a bit and revisit it when I have more emotional energy. Right now, after Christopher's comment and your last paragraph, I am sincerely drained. — Preceding unsigned comment added by Tpmeli (talkcontribs) 17:26, 18 August 2014 (UTC)

You specifically said that in it's current form, the only thing that needs updating is the info about the doTerra lawsuit. I was attempting to point out why statements like that indicate that your COI may be clouding your judgement.
YL's accomplishments are newsworthy to the degree they are covered by independent news sources. If you can find positive coverage in reliable sources, great.
Confining your edits to the talk page is a good idea. It's clear you are frustrated by the process, but you can't say I didn't warn you this would happen. You can call us 'paranoid', but consider instead that perhaps our experiences have given us a perspective that you lack. Grayfell (talk) 18:01, 18 August 2014 (UTC)

Ah I understand your statement then. By "needs" I meant - "needs to be updated right now because it is old or inaccurate." I did not mean to imply the article didn't need further updating.

News sources, got it.

You did warn me, and I absolutely believe you do have a perspective I lack... I also think there is room for all of us to grow in how we respond to each other.

Lastly, I think wikipedia needs to require training in editing before they let people edit. I think it would solve alot of these issues.

Thanks again for your generous time. Tpmeli (talk) 18:43, 18 August 2014 (UTC)tpmeli

changing username

is it possible than one can change their username? it sure seems that in the preferences no such option exists, but i'd love to edit mine. thanks! wxl (talk) 19:54, 20 August 2014 (UTC)

@Bikefridaywalter: Yup, you can change your username. Info on how to do that is here: Wikipedia:Changing username. It's not as simple as a menu item, but it's pretty straightforward. Good luck. Grayfell (talk) 20:23, 20 August 2014 (UTC)
@Grayfell: thanks, that's super useful. two things, though:
  1. if i want my SUL to ultimately be changed, should i go to the appropriate meta-wiki or do i need to do that in addition to the wikipedia one?
  2. i can't tell if the username i want (wxl) is taken. it appears on the user list but there is no creation date. what am i missing?
wxl (talk) 17:48, 21 August 2014 (UTC)
@Bikefridaywalter: Hmm... Those are good questions that are a little over my head.
There are currently 47,373,531 named accounts, so I'm going to guess that all the three-letter combos are taken. I'm not sure why the name doesn't have a creation date. There are three unattached accounts with that name (en, zh, and meta) [3] but none have made any contributions, nor have they been blocked or such, so you should be able to WP:USURP them, if you want. My advice is to put in a request at the metawiki link you posted. If they can't point you in the right direction, the WP:HELPDESK or the WP:TEAHOUSE should know. Sorry I can't be of more help. Grayfell (talk) 18:37, 21 August 2014 (UTC)

Discussion at Talk:Magnifier (Windows)#Requested move 23 August 2014

You are invited to join the discussion at Talk:Magnifier (Windows)#Requested move 23 August 2014. Thanks. Dogmaticeclectic (talk) 16:50, 27 August 2014 (UTC)

Reported to WP:Administrator intervention against vandalism. Could also be reported to WP:Administrators' noticeboard/Edit warring due to WP:3RR at this point. -- DanielPenfield (talk) 20:06, 7 September 2014 (UTC)

Thanks. That was my intention, but I was on a tablet, and wanted to wait until I was at a proper keyboard to finish the process. Looks like it's all taken care of, at least for now. Grayfell (talk) 21:07, 7 September 2014 (UTC)

Hello Grayfell, The page is just a list of Six Sigma Certification organizations. I am the President of such an organization and am trying to add a link to my organization in the section that lists for-profit organizations (https://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=List_of_Six_Sigma_certification_organizations&action=edit&section=3.) There is no conflict of interest because there are no opinions or editorial content, just links. I would like my deleted content added back to the page and I understand that you can do that for me. Thank you. TucsonTom (talk) 01:31, 9 December 2014 (UTC)

@Pyzdek: Hello. That article (and Six Sigma before it) have a history of spam. When editing the article, you'll notice that there is a comment repeated several times throughout the page: Note: Please list only nationally accredited universities that are certification service providers in this section that are mentioned or recommended in high-quality secondary sources There are many certification companies out there. Some are legitimate, but many are 'cert-mills' that are not worth mentioning, and a rare handful are malicious scammers. Because lists like this can be so easily manipulated, writing the article first is often given as a prerequisite for inclusion in a list. Regardless, in order to insure that Wikipedia doesn't become an indiscriminate directory of links, we require solid, reliable, WP:SECONDARY sources discussing your program. Simply linking to your site is not good enough. Having looked at your website, I would caution you that BBB ratings and similar are also not good enough.
And I must disagree, you most certainly do have a conflict of interest. You are adding your institution as a form of promotion. It is up to you to demonstrate that you can still edit neutrally in spite of that conflict. You may find this article: Wikipedia:Plain and simple conflict of interest guide useful. Thanks. Grayfell (talk) 01:54, 9 December 2014 (UTC)

Regarding your edits

- As I stated when I made the edit, "Swami" is not just an honorific but is actually part of his legal name (his legal name is Swami Chidanand Saraswati, not Chidanand Saraswati). I of course however am not going to share his passport or his other offical documents from the Government of India to prove this... - I had actually tried to change the page's name back to Swami Chidanand Saraswati, as it had originally been, but could not figure out how to do. - If "Swami" is going to keep being deleted, than that is fine too, it's just slightly incorrect. - I will work on getting secondary references up which confirm his positions in his various organizations. Thank you for letting me know instead of just deleting. — Preceding unsigned comment added by Shantiparmarth (talkcontribs) 04:32, 10 September 2014 (UTC)

Too Cool! edits

Hi, thank you for taking a look at the page and fixing what you considered to be promotional. I take issue with your replacement of "up-and-coming creators" with "new creators" - it's inaccurate to say that the people who worked on Too Cool! shorts are all new. Many of them have been around for years, but have not found mainstream success independently, hence, up-and-coming. Other descriptions more accurate than "new" could be: emerging, undiscovered, rising, etc. I will be changing it back to "up-and-coming"; please do not just revert that edit to "new."

In addition, I don't know why you added the end date back in - that was a factual error. The shorts are still in development, so they have not ended. So I'm changing that back too.

I did not realize press that includes interviews with creators counts as a primary source, so apologies for that. No one told me that in high school! I'll get on adding actual secondary and tertiary sources to the articles.

Finally, I think you reverted an edit that included fixing misspellings of names, so I'm changing that back as well. ~~~~. Thanks, Lrfranks

Nope, the name misspelling was all you. You reintroduced it when you added the YouTube links. Copy-pasting, especially from an external editor, can cause problems like that. "What you consider promotional" huh? Tell me how you really feel, why dontcha? About the term "up and coming" and all of your proposed replacements, review WP:PEACOCK. The term used needs to impart objective info, not just make them sound dynamic and buzzworthy. Thanks for correcting the series end-date issue, but, uh, since you have knowledge of the series that is not in any attached sources, if you are involved with Frederator, you need to review WP:COI. Regardless, the article's talk page is the place to discuss further edits. When signing your name on a talk page, just type four tildes, don't copy-paste them, don't use an external editor like Word, and dont use HTML code, it defeats the purpose. Thanks. Grayfell (talk) 19:00, 24 September 2014 (UTC)

Laffer curve

Grayfell, I've changed the citation to the GPO. If you remove this important clarification again, I'll know you have a non neutral POV. If you don't, thank you for helping me improve the text and citation. VikingExplorer (talk) 16:54, 26 September 2014 (UTC)

I have responded to the content changes on the article's talk page (Talk:Supply-side economics) where this discussion should be held. My objective is to make the article clear, concise, and neutral using verifiable sources, and making veiled ultimatums and sweeping generalization about my motives based on two edits is not going to get you anywhere. Instead, please discuss the edit on the article's talk page to resolve the issues. Grayfell (talk) 23:46, 26 September 2014 (UTC)

Gunmen

Dear Grayfell. Media has continously been using Gunmen as a term to negate the negative nature of the actions of these individuals, namely terrorism. Terrorist actions have a clear unbiased definition while gunmen has the implication of a benign nature instead of a violent action to achieve a political goal.

I think wikipedia needs to address this in changing the term gunmen from its content or an article on the media policy to insert gunmen to certain groups the media has a bias towards.

For example gunmen is almost always used to describe Palestinian terrorists, but not IS terrorists. This is a clear bias which I think needs to be addressed.

Best regards

Santana

Santana134 (talk) 06:22, 28 September 2014 (UTC)

First, the very first sentence of my talk page asks you to leave new messages on the bottom of the page. Following that simple request would've been a good show of respect and willingness to follow Wikipedia's guidelines. Second, this is an issue that should be discussed on the ARTICLE'S talk pages, not on my talk page. Conflating Palestinians with IS members is muddying an already confusing issue. Wikipedia is not a place for simplifying complex issues. Again, discuss this on the articles' talk pages, not with any one individual editor. Hopefully it's obvious why, because even if you convince me, (which is going to take a lot more than recklessly using the notion of 'media bias' without any sources to support your claim) you're then going to have to convince all the other editors all over again. This is an incredibly sensitive issue in a topic that has already been exhaustively discussed before. Look over past discussions, be patient, and pay attention to where you're saying what you're saying. Make sense? Grayfell (talk) 06:54, 28 September 2014 (UTC)

WP:1RR on Men's Rights Movement

Information icon Thank you for your contributions to the encyclopedia! In case you are not already aware, an article to which you have recently contributed, Men's rights movement, is on article probation. A detailed description of the terms of article probation may be found at Talk:Men's rights movement/Article probation. Also note that the terms of some article probations extend to related articles and their associated talk pages.

The above is a templated message. Please accept it as a routine friendly notice, not as a claim that there is necessarily any problem with your edits. Thank you. -- EvergreenFir (talk) Please {{re}} 04:29, 5 October 2014 (UTC) MRM is under a one-revert rule. You have reverted twice in the past 24 hours. Please be cautious in your reverts. EvergreenFir (talk) Please {{re}} 04:29, 5 October 2014 (UTC)

Thank you, I had forgotten about the one-revert rule. Grayfell (talk) 04:31, 5 October 2014 (UTC)

Knee scooters

Hi can you tell me why the link to the page on knee scooters being better than crutches was removed? Thanks. — Preceding unsigned comment added by 174.21.174.118 (talk) 19:32, 9 October 2014 (UTC)

Hello. Sure, I can do that. The link is to what appears to be an individual blog, (which in Wikipedia jargon is a WP:SPS- a self-published source). It didn't help that the blog endorsed a product and had Amazon affiliate links prominently featured on it. Wikipedia doesn't use blogs (except those by established experts in certain circumstances) and Wikipedia is not a platform for promotion, which this appeared to be. It might help to familiarize yourself with Wikipedia's guidelines on external links and verifiability. Thanks. Grayfell (talk) 19:54, 9 October 2014 (UTC)

Judy Carter's page

I was not trying to violate copywright laws. My goal was to revert back to the old page that had links to her books.

to have a wikipedia page you must so noteforthyness. Judy has published four books and the links to her books depict this. So i re-established them manually

204.102.74.5 (talk) 21:31, 9 October 2014 (UTC)

Nope. Assuming I'm even reading that correctly, that is flat-out wrong. The book articles have nothing to do with notability. You obviously knew how to make Wikilinks, since you just did it, so the claim that you restored all the promotional content as a way to put those back is silly, bordering on insulting. Grayfell (talk) 21:56, 9 October 2014 (UTC)

I'm in the process of finding secondary sources for the wikipedia page and fixing up the articles. Who decides if the pages get deleted or not Nerdypunkkid (talk) 18:15, 11 October 2014 (UTC)

You should've added reliable secondary sources when you created the articles, and not wait over a year for someone else to notice. Your talk page demonstrates that you've already been banned once for creating promotional articles without any secondary sources, so I don't accept that you didn't understand how this works. As for who decides if the pages get deleted, there are a bunch of links right on your talk page, and the nominated articles, explaining all of that. If you don't understand those pages, how about this? I'll answer your questions when you answer mine. Grayfell (talk) 21:08, 11 October 2014 (UTC)

Yes I was banned in 2008 when I created the article about Dan Nainan i believe. It was a work in progress article which I intended to start and work on over a the course of a couple of days and not complete within the time of posting. As a result i wrote things with out properly citing them and it kept getting taken down, after speaking to an admin orangemike i believe they told me about wiki scrapbook which i used to complete the article and then once it was completed and cited it was posted and accepted.

When I created the articles: The Message of you, The Homo handbook, The Comedy Bible, Standup comedy the book. I viewed other wiki articles of comedy books and saw that they only had one or two citation for instance: Brain dropping by George Carlin only has one reference and the book Three Times Carlin also by George Carlin only has an amazon listing as the reference. So that what i used a model for creating the wiki articles of these book, the ISBN number and a reference or two. When i posted them they were not nominated for speedy deletion and in a day or so there was a tab on the talk stating that the book are within the scope of wikibooks. Then I was shocked a year later when you came along and not just nominated them for deletion or started a discussion on talk that there need more citations but just delete them all together.

What other questions you have for me

here one for you the latest edit on the Homo handbook why did you delete a good citation

Nerdypunkkid (talk) 20:29, 12 October 2014 (UTC)

Please stop formatting these talk page entries with bullet points, it is extremely distracting. You might want to review Wikipedia:Talk page guidelines, but just try to make it look like all the other entries on this talk page.
Why were you adding WP:REFSPAM to articles? I linked to the question, did you actually read what I wrote on your talk page? If not, please do.
Sometime when you make an article, it takes a while before anybody else pays attention. That doesn't mean the article is now invincible and can't be challenged. You're basically trying to sneak-in articles hoping nobody notices. Does that sound like how Wikipedia should work to you?
Find sources that are more reliable, and offer deeper coverage. If you don't understand why some sources are good and others aren't, you need to figure that out before going any further.
Yes, Brain Droppings needs more sources. However, that book was written by a very famous comedian, and was a New York Times bestseller for almost forty weeks. These are clear indications of notability. The four Judy Carter books gave no such indications. The Homo Handbook looks like it might squeak-by the deletion process, but it will have to be rewritten to be less promotional. All four articles, as well as Judy Carter itself were written like advertising. Wikipedia isn't a place for advertising.
I have no idea what you mean by "wikibooks". https://en.wikibooks.org/ is a website for open-source textbooks, which has nothing to do with what we're talking about. None of the four book related articles have talk pages, and I don't see anything similar on your talk page.
The source at "teachclean.com" was useless. It was an extremely questionable site, and as a source, it didn't support anything that wasn't already in the article with better sources. We're not looking for any-and-all sources you can find about the books. We're looking for quality sources that actually add new information for building an article. Maybe Help:Referencing for beginners would help. When creating an article, the sources have to actually establish that the subject is significant. Not just passing mentions or listings in directories. You have already been explained this on your talk page, and I'm betting other places, too. So what is the source of confusion? Grayfell (talk) 21:55, 12 October 2014 (UTC)

Hi

Hello, sorry, i'm not contributing to WikiPony anymore. And my lvl in english is not good enough. Also, i don't want to become fair game or SP

I'm just a reader now. Intro of article looked pretty much straight forward "evil cult", rather than actually trying to address the subject of the article which is "Scientology in France". One element of the subject eating the whole article. Now it looks a little better after your editions.

Started on wrong foot ? mmmh, ARC breaks happens. I didn't edited an article in a long time. One edit, revert, edition war. Haaaa, da good old WP.

May i suggest a new section be added in the article about the organization of the church in France, and their web of associations. (secondary sources consider it an element worth of mention). The early history of Scientology in France can be found in the book La secte: secte armée pour la guerre : chronique d'une "religion" commerciale à irresponsabilité illimité by fr:Roger Gonnet. Names of those associations can be found on Scientology websites and in the Journal officiel de la République française that publish the creation/modification of any association in France. The parliamentary reports and MILS/MIVIDULES reports lengthly discuss the topic of those associations and their actions.

Looks like i don't have the lvl in english to write it, also wiki syntax and habits are different.

I prefer tea!

Bye bye. --Lilyu (talk) 09:42, 16 October 2014 (UTC)


You are Fucking up all Size 14 related projects

Whats your problem with this band? --Shingovertheworld1 (talk) 22:52, 20 October 2014 (UTC)

I'm trying to make the articles less crappy. If you've got a problem with that, please discuss on the article's talk pages, and familiarize yourself with Wikipedia's policies. Grayfell (talk) 22:53, 20 October 2014 (UTC)

Stop fucking editing articles you have no knowledge over the subject on. --Shingovertheworld1 (talk) 22:56, 20 October 2014 (UTC)

Be nice. You don't get to decide who is and isn't an expert. Like I said, if you have a problem with my edits, discuss them. Copy/pasting the old versions isn't going to accomplish much. Grayfell (talk) 22:58, 20 October 2014 (UTC)

John Harvatine IV

Hi! In an article regarding the Harvatine post and the xbox programming, it's states Harvatine as a director. Can that be added back in? Thanks of you help.

Chuck Sample — Preceding unsigned comment added by Chuck sample (talkcontribs) 23:04, 22 October 2014 (UTC)

@Chuck sample: No, I don't really think so. The source doesn't say he's the director. It says he's one of the creators, along with Eric Towner. It also gives mentions Seth Green and Matt Senreich very prominently.
That's the problem with all the sources: they mention Harvatine as a duo with Towner, or as part of Stoopid Billy Stoodies. There's very little about Harvatine by himself at this point. Without some more specific, reliable sources about Harvatine, the article might end up being turned into an article about Stoopid Buddy Stoodies, or merged with Stoopid Monkey. Grayfell (talk) 02:17, 23 October 2014 (UTC)

Thank you again for your help, I can't say that enough. Regarding Harvatine as a director, doesn't this seem to make it clear enough?? Just checking:

Sony Pictures Animation is developing a stop-motion “Superbago” movie with “Robot Chicken” exec producers/animators John Harvatine and Eric Towner directing.

That's from this:http://variety.com/2014/film/news/superbago-sony-pictures-animation-1201259695/

And what about this article to help his cause, or is it too fluff for him:

http://fortune.com/2012/11/26/behind-seth-greens-stop-motion-animation-success/

Actually, I like that Fortune article. You're right, it's kinda fluffy, and interviews are WP:PRIMARY, but it helps give some perspective on how significant he is to Robot Chicken. Reading that, I think that the Stoopid Monkey article really needs to be updated.
The thing with Superbago is that it's not out yet, so we need to avoid giving WP:UNDUE weight to it. If it had it's own article (Superbago), that might change things, because we could explain it more clearly. We can mention that he's co-directing, along with Towner, but even that seems premature to me. Grayfell (talk) 02:43, 23 October 2014 (UTC)
Sorry. To be clear, the article already mentions that they are directing it. What I mean is we should avoid any further info unless it's supported by solid, reliable sources. Grayfell (talk)

I really appreciate you explaining things, and I hope I've showed enough of my boss's stuff to keep his page up. Off the record, I really loved your comment: (cur | prev) 21:47, 22 October 2014‎ Grayfell (talk | contribs)‎ . . (1,531 bytes) (-94)‎ . . (→‎References: Having attended an industry "Awards Soiree" is not worth mentioning.) (undo | thank)

That was pretty funny. He won an award that night, or the studio did, but that was a pretty funny comment. Also, I was looking today, he has been nominated for two emmys, as it states on his IMDB, but I'm having trouble showing his name in the credits of the 2013 one. They just don't seem to have a record of that online. Also, can I upload a picture of him from a panel at this years Comic Con? And should I keep digging for more articles with him in it? He was on a LA BUSINESS JOURNAL article but I can only find a printed one online. Just trying to help, and thanks again for your time, I'm sure this isn't an easy job.

@Chuck sample: I'm glad I can help. I am, at heart, a pedantic person, so having an outlet where I can use that for good instead of evil is a source of satisfaction for me.
Pictures are very fussy things. Wikipedia:Picture tutorial is worth going through for the technical aspect. It helps to understand that Wikipedia:Image use policy is very strict, since it's all about copyright violations and how Wikipedia is used. Volunteers who are familiar with it are often overworked and under-thanked, so it tends to be an unforgiving process.
Put simply, you should not upload a picture you personally do not have the rights to, and you should not upload a picture you're not comfortable being used for a wide variety of other purposes. This is a very common mistake, but it usually means that you, as a person, are the one who took the photo. That's a simplification, but not much of one. Like I said, fussy. From past experience I suggest taking the time to go over it, and make sure your ducks are in a row before submitting a picture to save yourself aggravation and wasted time.
More meaty sources are good. Passing mentions, or more stuff that just says he's part of Stoopid Buddy without any further info, are probably not needed, but anything more substantial is worth considering.
More importantly, you should also read Wikipedia:Plain and simple conflict of interest guide, because you have a Wikipedia:Conflict of interest. This doesn't mean you cannot edit, but it does bring with it a lot of challenges. Wikipedia is not a platform for promotion, and attempts to use it as such don't go over very well, so please, please understand what you're getting into. It was pretty obvious when you mentioned where he grew up and what high school he went to without any sources, but it's greatly appreciated that you're open and transparent about it. Some editors pretend they're "just fans", but they're not fooling anyone, and it's just awkward.
By volume, most of the massive wall of text above this discussion here on this talk page is me dealing with conflict of interest stuff, so I hope you can understand why I'm emphasizing this point. Taking a look at the COI guide will help. Thanks. Grayfell (talk) 07:56, 23 October 2014 (UTC)


BIG AGILE TOOLKIT

Hi! Thanks for your comments. However the Big Agile Toolkit is not spam. I added the resource to the agile resources page in sincere expectation that readers will have easy access to a resource for deploying projects at scale using agile principles. The web resource to which it links is a full free copy of the resource and it is free. So I hope you will agree that there is no financial gain. Im not expecting you or I to voice our professional credentials to evaluate or recommend agile approaches. I am happy to do so if this helps however. Pcfmuser (talk) 16:26, 27 October 2014 (UTC). Thanks. Martin Leonard

@Pcfmuser: It appears you are confused about how Wikipedia works in general, and specifically about how external links work in articles. "Big Agile Toolkit" is an external site, which you linked to inside of an article. That's almost never acceptable, per WP:EL. If you are unwilling to read that guideline, just note that the other items listed in the "Agile methods" section of the article all link to other Wikipedia articles. Your link was to an outside site, and is therefor inappropriate. Write the article first, although please, please include solid WP:SECONDARY sources when you do. The current Draft:Big Agile fails to do this, as one is a link to your site, and the other is a dead link of unknown significance.
Additionally, it doesn't matter if it's free, and you appear to be operating under an overly-narrow definition of spam. The link served to promote a website without any secondary sources establishing its significance. Further, the link is to a site which lists Martin Leonard as the author. The site is aggressively listing Amazon.com affiliate links. Your username matches the domain name of the "about" link on the site, which offers commercial services. You are clearly not impartial, here, and pretending otherwise is counterproductive. WP:REFSPAM is still spam.
Wikipedia uses reliable sources, not personal expertise or professional credentials. If there are reliable sources that establish your expertise, so be it, but mucking about with WP:AUTOBIOs rarely ends well. Grayfell (talk) 21:48, 27 October 2014 (UTC)

Hi

Hey there, I read your comment on my page and I'd just like to say (as unbelievable as it may sound) that the edit onto the page 'Poster' wasn't me. I am a student at junior high, and most of the other students in my class are rather immature. So having left my laptop open one of my friends decided to edit a page using my wikipedia account. Thank you for your understanding Xaverin (talk) 20:28, 7 November 2014 (UTC)

Edit: Grayfell is a really cool name! Xaverin (talk) 20:30, 7 November 2014 (UTC)

@Xaverin: Thanks! Grayfell is either another name for Grani, Sigurd's horse, or is the name of Sigmund's horse, or they are the same horse, depending on which source you're reading. Really, though, I just chose it because I thought it sounded cool.
It's not unbelievable at all. I kinda figured that when someone replaces the word 'art' with 'fart' junior high is probably involved, so no worries. If you don't remember to log out, or keep a closer eye on your laptop, you may eventually get banned if that kind of thing happens regularly, but it's not a huge deal, and many respected editors have that kind of thing in their history. Grayfell (talk) 08:54, 8 November 2014 (UTC)

Hello! There is a DR/N request you may have interest in.

This message is being sent to let you know of a discussion at the Wikipedia:Dispute resolution noticeboard regarding a content dispute discussion you may have participated in. Content disputes can hold up article development and make editing difficult for editors. You are not required to participate, but you are both invited and encouraged to help this dispute come to a resolution. The thread is "India Against Corruption". Please join us to help form a consensus. Thank you! --Mdann52talk to me! 08:28, 8 November 2014 (UTC)

TruthRevolt

Have you seen this? http://www.truthrevolt.org/news/truthrevolt-labeled-unreliable-source-wikipedia-editor Thought you should know in case you haven't. FYI, I'm mentioning it in the next Signpost. Gamaliel (talk) 17:03, 12 November 2014 (UTC)

Huh. Weird. Thanks for the heads up. Grayfell (talk) 21:21, 12 November 2014 (UTC)

Question about what "promotional" means

I have a quick question about what "promotional" means. On the Wikipedia page for "stickers" and for "street art" I had added links to a non-profit, alternative street art stickers museum called "Hatch Kingdom." You had taken it down saying it was too promotional. Yet there are lots of pages that are devoted to places like the Guggenheim Museum, etc. What would be an appropriate way to let people know that a museum devoted to sticker art exists? Also, this is the first time I've done anything on Wikipedia, so please forgive any errors of terms of signing my name, etc. Not sure about the four tildes, for example.Stickerkitty (talk) 17:36, 28 November 2014 (UTC)

@Stickerkitty: Hello. There's a mismatch between the museum and its website. Hatch Kingdom's website appears to be about buying-and-selling, with info about the museum almost an afterthought. This is why it looks like WP:SPAM to me. The site appears to be for a small, primarily commercial website which is also a museum. It's a cool idea, but the site has very little info about the museum itself, other than confirming its existence.
If you would like to include info about the museum, one good place to start is by finding WP:RELIABLE, WP:SECONDARY sources about the museum. Books, newspapers, journals, magazines, that kind of thing. The Guggenheim, per your example, has many, many sources talking about it. The Guggenheim also publishes reliable works about notable art and artists, which is why it can sometimes be helpful to link to it in other articles. If you're looking for sources, be cautious of blogs, zines, and forums, since they are usually self-published sources (WP:SPS), and are rarely usable. I did a cursory search for sources, and didn't find anything that jumped out at me, but don't let that discourage you from looking deeper. Also, I don't speak German, which would be helpful.
Signature looks good. If you have any additional questions, let me know. Grayfell (talk) 23:29, 28 November 2014 (UTC)

Revision 635666845 on Multilevel Marketing page that you undid on 11/27/14

Hello Grayfell,

The editor who submitted this revision (‪the oddly named 2601:d:ca00:1b36:202f:5d4e:964:7a1a‬ ) asserted that the orginal language was "heavily biased". You undid the revision claiming that the new wording no longer represented the referenced sources attributed to it. Fair enough. However, these are not only "heavily biased" sources, they are grossly inaccurate. This includes, but is not limited to: No MLM company "requires" the purchase of products (not one), none have been publicly criticized for legally challenged for "price fixing" since FTC v. Amway in 1979, only Amway allows their reps to sell training and motivational tools (thus 99% of MLM companies do not), and even they have substantially limited this activity in recent years. It's also nonsensical to quote these sources as to "cult like" activity that suggests participants are brainwashed into not quitting in light of the actual, common, and completely contradictory criticism that the vast majority of MLM participants quit in their first year (and most of them quit in their first 90 days).

Furthermore, one of these sources is a heavily discredited article by Dean VanDruff which contains numerous verifiably inaccurate statements written by someone who has never been an MLM participant, nor possesses any level of expertise in the subject, that was written twenty years ago! Nor has VanDruff written anything about MLM before or since.

All of this begs the question, why not maintain the revised text, which was indeed more neutral and appropriate wording, and simply remove the heavily biased, grossly inaccurate sources it is attributed to? — Preceding unsigned comment added by Mwave (talkcontribs) 23:45, 3 December 2014 (UTC)

Hello, @Mwave:. I'm not sure where you got the idea that people don't quit cults, that's actually very common. Most people who join new religious movements leave within a couple of years (Apostasy#Other religious movements) much like MLMs and/or pyramid schemes. That doesn't really matter, though, because Wikipedia is based on WP:RELIABLE sources, NOT personal anecdote or opinion. You're making a lot of claims, but you're not including any sources. Your personal expertise is not WP:VERIFIABLE. A quick glance at your edit history shows that this is worth emphasizing. You should review Wikipedia's polices on sources: Wikipedia:Identifying reliable sources. Judging by your username, it looks like you have already tried to WP:SELFCITE at least once,[4] and to a WP:SPS that should not be used as a source.
Regarding the edit in question: The article contains many, many sources supporting the assertions in the lead. To clear-up any confusion, the lead is intended to summarize the body of the article, and for that reason inline references are not strictly needed there. The edit in question did not remove the reference to price-fixing, neither did it reference the sales of training material. Having said that, many MLMs sell training and "motivational" materials as a requirement for qualifying for bonuses (Vemma, for example[5]) not just Amway. Again, I have no idea where you got that factoid. If you think that companies which engage in unpalatable behaviors must not be MLMs, that sounds to me like a case of No true Scotsman.
If you have a problem with a specific source you should take it up at Talk:Multi-level marketing, or WP:RSN, not here on my talk page. Do you seriously think that only MLM reps are qualified to write about MLMs? If so, you have some major misconceptions about how Wikipedia works. Again, the place to propose specific edits is on the article's talk page, not here. This is so others can easily find and contribute to discussions. If you have questions about Wikipedia in general, I will try to answer them, but any comments about a specific article may be deleted from my talk page at my discretion. Grayfell (talk) 05:23, 4 December 2014 (UTC)
WP:TLDR
The following discussion has been closed. Please do not modify it.
Grayfell: I responded to this particular revision (or rejection of a revision) on your Talk Page because you were the editor who undid the revision. My issue is not with Wikipedia, it is with a specific action taken by you, based entirely on your judgement and interpretation of Wiki policy. Based on the relevant policies I've read, this is precisely what Talk Pages are for.
Firstly, I never suggested "people don't quit cults". My comment regarding cults was specific to the source's (Carol and VanDruff's) alleged assertion that "cult-like techniques" are used to "enhance their members' enthusiasm and devotion". Besides the fact this comment would clearly be a subjective opinion based on Carol or VanDruff's anecdotal observations (thus not even remotely in line with WP:RELIABLE), neither of the works that these references link to even mention the word "cult". As to the related claim published on the Wiki page, it is diametrically opposed to the common, well documented fact that virtually all MLMs experience annual attrition rates of 80-95% (the majority of which quit within the first 90 days). Either MLMs, in general, or at least in large numbers, use "cult-like" brainwashing techniques to cement their participant's "enthusiasm and devotion", or they lose their "enthusiasm and devotion" en mass, and in droves. How can these two positions be reconciled?
I will not respond to the rest of your commentary within your first paragraph as it is unrelated to the issue we are discussing. Rather, it seems to be an attempt to discredit the source of the point rather than the actual point.
Having said that, and since you did choose to interject this into the discussion, the position you (and one other editor in the past) hold that I am not a "reliable" source as to the subject of multilevel marketing is in light of the easily verifiable fact that I have almost 25 years of experience not just as a distributor, but as a consultant and consumer advocate, and have been adjudged by a court of law as an "expert" in this field. In fact, I believe I am one of fewer than ten US citizens who have testified before a jury, as an expert in MLM and pyramid schemes, in a federal, criminal case. I have researched, studied, analyzed and commented on this subject as my full time occupation since 1990. Mr. VanDruff, on the other hand, openly admits to having no experience with MLM, of any kind (his analysis was "theoretical"), and his entire exhibition of knowledge of this subject is a single article he wrote in 1990! An article riddled with easily verifiable errors, that became outdated a decade ago, and which contains not a single footnote, nor any form of reference or sourcing.
Yet, here on Wikipedia, VanDruff is considered a "reliable" and "verifiable" source as to MLM, and I am not. Which is, on its face, patently absurd.
Regarding the edit in question: You say the article contains "many sources supporting the assertions in the lead", and that "inline references are not strictly needed there". Fair enough. So, once again, I pose my original question: Why not accept the more neutral language that was submitted, that is much more in line with Wiki policy, and simply remove the "heavily biased" sources that you now claim are not even necessary?
I described the issue of price fixing and sale of training material amongst a list of examples as to the unreliability of the sources in question.
Your claim that "many MLMs sell training and 'motivational' materials as a requirement for qualifying for bonuses" is utterly false. The only thing MLM companies "require" their reps to purchase is an initial enrollment kit (usually under $50) and, very rarely, a small monthly fee to access an on-line "back office" (optional in the vast majority of MLM programs). Vemma has no such requirement, nor does the source you referenced claim they do. Even the "tapes and tools" once sold by Amway Diamonds were entirely separate from the Amway compensation plan, and unrelated to commission qualification. If I may borrow your own words, I have no idea where you got that factoid.
Finally, you rhetorically (I assume) asked, "Do you seriously think that only MLM reps are qualified to write about MLMs?" No, nor do I recall even remotely suggesting any such thing. Nor would I considering I am not an "MLM rep", nor have I been for several years. However, I do believe that to be qualified as a "reliable", authoritative source on MLM you should have at least some practical knowledge of how it actually works in the real world, today.
Whoever is responsible for the current version of this paragraph, whether sourced or not, and regardless of its accuracy, it is clearly written in a "heavily biased" manner. The edits made did, in fact, cause it to be much more neutral and thus in line with Wiki policy. The only explanation you have provided for undoing the revision was that the newer, more neutral language no longer applied to the non-neutral, footnoted sources. So, the question remains: Why did you choose to undo the revision rather than simply remove the footnotes? — Preceding unsigned comment added by Mwave (talkcontribs) 02:30, 5 December 2014 (UTC)