Wikinews:Alternative Review Process Proposal

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I would like to propose a different process for publishing and reviewing pages/articles on Wikinews.

Contents

[edit] Principles

A news organization such as Wikinews should follow a set of guiding principles in understanding the worth and validity of an article. I propose that the ranked set of principles for Wikinews be as follows:

  1. Timeliness
  2. Correctness
  3. Completeness
  4. Objectivity

These will be discussed in detail below. Each principle refers to Wikipedia for comparison. Each principle contains preemptive responses to potential criticisms that the current policy is good enough. Finally, each principle contains a section outlining what that principle means to Wikinews.

[edit] Principles, in detail

[edit] Timeliness

[edit] Principle of Timeliness

[edit] Responses to "current policy is enough"

[edit] What this means for Wikinews

[edit] Correctness

[edit] Principle of Correctness

[edit] Responses to "current policy is enough"

[edit] What this means for Wikinews

[edit] Completeness

[edit] Principle of Completeness

[edit] Responses to "current policy is enough"

[edit] What this means for Wikinews

[edit] Objectivity

[edit] Principle of Objectivity

[edit] Responses to "current policy is enough"

[edit] What this means for Wikinews

[edit] The proposed Wikinews Review Policy

The set of principles outlines above can be applied to the Wikinews process by relying on article creators to do the right thing. This means that we should assume that articles are going to be timely, correct, complete and objective: the review policy should exist only for those articles that are not.

In this proposed policy, all article authors would simply place their articles in the appropriate place: be it section page, Main Page, or wherever they deem the article belongs. As there's an implicit hierarchy in news based on geographic locale, the articles' ability to rise through the hierarchy depends on the perceived importance of the news story. However it is a review decision to drop the article through the hierarchy.

An article is considered "published" as soon as the page is created and linked-to from somewhere. Any future edits can either alter the article copy, or add flags about a perceived violation of some principle. To place a flag is obviously subjective, and therein the normal wiki editorial policy of consensus-forming will apply.

The article can be edited at any point. Some news articles are for stories that have happened in the past and do not require additional explanation or elaboration in the future. Some news articles are on-going short-term events: Arafat's death is one such example, taking place over about a week. Some articles are about newsworthy events that take much, much longer: the conflict in Iraq is an example of a news topic that has daily developments over years; the African desert locust swarm is an example of a news topic that has roughly monthly developments. Some articles are newsworthy for short periods of time several times in the course of a story (a story about a robbery for example might have the robbery, the capture, and the conviction of the robbers as three separate events that need to be cross-referenced from previous stories).

It is in order to accommodate the variety of articles (pages) on Wikinews that this policy suggests that articles are never frozen. It can be frowned upon to revise articles written a long time ago, but it sometimes happens that errors (violations of the principles) can be detected a long time after a story is first published. It would be unfair to subject stories of local interest with little attention from Wikinewsians to the same criteria for freezing as stories of international, front-page interest.

However, this policy recognizes the need for controlling revisionism, and proposes that regular digests provide this function. By having these digests (news magazines, daily summaries, or whatnot) reference specific versions of pages it will always be possible to determine how the world looked at some point in time, while still allowing the reader to click through to the most recent version of the article.

[edit] Arguments

[edit] Arguments for this policy

[edit] Arguments against this policy

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