Editors must take particular care when writing biographies of living persons, which require a degree of sensitivity, and which must adhere strictly to our content policies:
We must get the article right. Be very firm about high quality Citing sources, particularly about details of personal lives. Unsourced or poorly sourced negative material about living persons should be removed immediately from both the article and the talk page. "WikiEN-l Zero information is preferred to misleading or false information", Jimmy Wales, May 16, 2006 These principles also apply to biographical material about living persons in other articles. __TOC__
Well-founded complaints about biographical articles from their subjects arrive daily in the form of e-mails to the Wikipedia Contact us, phone calls to the Foundation headquarters and to Jimbo Wales, and via postal mail. These people are justifiably upset when they find inaccurate or distorted articles, and the successful resolution of such complaints is a touchy matter requiring ongoing involvement of OTRS volunteers and paid staff.
Frequently the problem is compounded when the subject attempts to edit their own article to remove problematic content. Since such people may not be regular Wikipedians, they are unaware of our policies, and are often accused of vandalism or revert warring when they are in fact trying to edit in good faith.
Accordingly, editors must take particular care with writing and editing biographies of living persons with these key areas in mind:
The article should document, in a non-partisan manner, what reliable third party sources have published about the subject and, in some circumstances, what the subject may have published about themselves. The writing style should be neutral, factual, and understated, avoiding both a sympathetic point of view and an advocacy journalism point of view.
Administrators encountering biographies that are unsourced and negative in tone, where there is no NPOV version to revert to, should delete the article without discussion (see CSD criteria A6).
Jimmy Wales has said: "I can NOT emphasize this enough. There seems to be a terrible bias among some editors that some sort of random speculative 'I heard it somewhere' pseudo information is to be tagged with a 'needs a cite' tag. Wrong. It should be removed, aggressively, unless it can be sourced. This is true of all information, but it is particularly true of negative information about living persons."
Information available solely on partisan websites or in obscure newspapers should be handled with caution, and, if derogatory, should not be used at all. Information found in self-published books, newspapers, or websites/blogs should never be used, unless written by the subject (see below).
Information supplied by the subject may be added to the article if:
A blog or personal website written by the subject may be listed in the external links/further reading section, even if the subject is not used as a source.
Material from primary sources should generally not be used. For example, public records may include personal details such as home value, outcomes of civil court cases, traffic citations, arrest records, and vehicles and real estate owned. Use material only from reliable third-party sources. If X's arrest records are relevant to his notability, someone else will have written about them.
In borderline cases, the rule of thumb should be "do no harm." Wikipedia is an encyclopedia, not a newspaper. It is not our job to be sensationalist, or to be the primary vehicle for the spread of titillating claims about people's lives.
Criticism should be sourced to RS and should be about the subject of the article specifically. Beware of claims that rely on Verifiability#Guilt_by_association.
Category names do not carry disclaimers or modifiers, so the case for the category must be made clear in the article text. The article must state the facts that result in the use of the category tag and these facts must be sourced.
For example, Category:Criminals should only be added when the notable crime has been described in the article and sources given.
Category tags regarding religious beliefs and sexual preference should not be used unless two criteria are met:
Caution should be used in adding categories that suggest the person has a low reputation. See Invasion of privacy#False light.
Anonymous edits that blank all or part of a biography of a living person should be evaluated carefully. When the individual involved is not especially notable, such edits usually are not vandalism but rather an effort by the subject of the article to remove biased or inaccurate material. RC patrollers and others who become involved should be careful to be sure who they're dealing with in such cases, and the use of inflammatory edit summaries or vandalism-related talk page templates should be avoided.
The Arbitration Committee has ruled in favor of showing mercy to the subjects of biographies, especially when those subjects become Wikipedia editors:
For those who either have or might have an article about themselves it is a temptation, especially if plainly wrong, or strongly negative information is included, to become involved in questions regarding their own article. This can open the door to rather immature behavior and loss of dignity. It is a violation of Don't bite the newbies to strongly criticize users who fall into this trap rather than seeing this phenomenon as a newbie mistake.
—Requests_for_arbitration/Rangerdude#Mercy (December 18, 2005)
If you have a query about or problem with an article about yourself, you can Contact us/Article problem/Factual error (from subject). Alternatively, please refer the editors on the page to this guideline. If you need help in enforcing the guideline, contact an administrator. See List of administrators.
Jimmy Wales, Designated Agent
Wikimedia Foundation, Inc.
146 2nd St N, # 310
St. Petersburg FL 33701
United States
Facsimile number: +1(727)258-0207
Email: board "at" wikimedia.org (replace the "at" with @)
E-mails may also be sent to: info-en "at" wikipedia.org (replace the "at" with @)
Relevant guidelines:
Articles about living persons that have been contentious:
Subject-specific notability criteria | Wikipedia proportion and emphasis | Living people
Wikipedia:Artikel über lebende Personen | Wikipedia:存命人物の伝記 | Wikipedia:生者傳記
This article is licensed under the GNU Free Documentation License.
It uses material from the
"Wikipedia:Biographies of living persons".
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