Talk:Sweet Baby Inc./Archive 3
This is an archive of past discussions about Sweet Baby Inc.. Do not edit the contents of this page. If you wish to start a new discussion or revive an old one, please do so on the current talk page. |
Archive 1 | Archive 2 | Archive 3 | Archive 4 |
NPOV is a fundamental principle of Wikipedia
section closed due to WP:NOTFORUM
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Everyone editing this article back and forth should please have a refresher on Neutral Point of View. Pay particular attention to the following:
I'll thank you for stopping inserting "falsely" and "correctly" in places where they do not belong. Sanzennin (talk) 12:48, 7 March 2024 (UTC)
Speaking of NPOV...I put the NPOV tag on the page because I don't think that calling
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"The group received increased attention in February when a Sweet Baby employee asked others to report it for failing Steam's code of conduct."
This is a mischaracterization of what actually happened that omits important context. The employee in question specifically tried to enact retribution on the creator of the Steam group by asking people to mass-report him in an attempt to get his Steam account banned. This was deemed to be targeted harassment according X's TOS and the employee's X account was temporarily banned as a result. Android927 (talk) 21:58, 12 March 2024 (UTC)
- Thanks for the information. Do you have any reliable sources we can use to include this in the article? – Rhain ☔ (he/him) 22:20, 12 March 2024 (UTC)
- And there you touch upon the heart of the issue: Alyssa Mercante and her fellow journalists will *never* report on Kindred's tweets because it is not in their interests to do so, yet you will not allow his own words to be cited as a source until one of them reports on it. You are basically letting one side of a hotly debated issue to entirely control the narrative by allowing them to gatekeep what information can and cannot be used as a citation. Android927 (talk) 00:02, 13 March 2024 (UTC)
- Alright, buddy, got any sources for it, then? LilianaUwU (talk / contributions) 00:05, 13 March 2024 (UTC)
- And there you touch upon the heart of the issue: Alyssa Mercante and her fellow journalists will *never* report on Kindred's tweets because it is not in their interests to do so, yet you will not allow his own words to be cited as a source until one of them reports on it. You are basically letting one side of a hotly debated issue to entirely control the narrative by allowing them to gatekeep what information can and cannot be used as a citation. Android927 (talk) 00:02, 13 March 2024 (UTC)
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- Meta discussion here about Wikipedia itself. What happens when this is a niche topic (like online gaming contraversy) and all the reliable sources (gaming journalists) are themselves being criticized? How would information of that kind ever make it onto a Wikipedia page?
- The topic that I'm most interested in is the accusation that gaming journalists are being in league with Sweet Baby; gaming journalists are omitting facts and covering only details that is beneficial to Sweet Baby. This is actually more interesting topic than the anti-woke currently written in the section "Online backlash and harassment".
- For example, "The curator group received increased attention in February when a Sweet Baby employee asked others to report it for failing Steam's code of conduct." is actually misleading, as this curator group had no attention at all, and it is the Sweet Baby employee's tweet itself that garnered all the attention. https://knowyourmeme.com/memes/events/sweet-baby-inc-detected-controversy (Yes, KnowYourMeme is not a reliable source.)
- In the end, I think perhaps the whole section of "Online backlash and harassment" might be marked with WP:N as it doesn't seem like any non-gaming journalist seems interested in covering this topic, and that the raw evidence is on twitter, and twitter posts are ephemeral and can be deleted (and only secondary evidence, like screenshots, can be preserved).
- Also, kudos to you Rhain for your diligence. Goose (talk) 23:08, 18 March 2024 (UTC)
- WP:N does not apply to sections, only whole articles. During GamerGate pt1 we saw a lot of this notion that if one 'side' of a dispute attacked journalism, that means Wikipedia could then not use journalists as a source. Since then, the same attacks have become extremely common in all kinds of political discourse (think of people who say 'Lamestream media'). But buying into that notion is untenable, one cannot silence critical sources just by making attacks on any journalist who writes something one disapproves of. MrOllie (talk) 23:20, 18 March 2024 (UTC)
- You are making an assumption that journalists are colliding with SBI here, but we first off don't work that way, and more importantly it is likely journalists, previously burned on "it's about ethics in video game journalism" from GG, are making a stance again from another vector out of the 4chan/8chan/Kiwi Farms venues that fester far right concepts, implicitly making SBI the side they trust to start with. And there is little I can see in both reliable and unreliable sources that suggest the larger picture is much different than what the RSes are saying. The counter narrative, that SBI was specifically formed to force diversity into games, has been shown clearly to be quotes taken out of context and what SBI actually does verified independently by game devs. It's really hard to find any type of appropriate lining here for the opposite side since unlike GG, all of what's been covered is out in the open. — Masem (t) 23:28, 18 March 2024 (UTC)
- and what of an archive link? MisteOsoTruth (talk) 11:07, 26 March 2024 (UTC)
HATting this per WP:FORUM. Discussion should be about improving the article, not complaints about Wikipedia policy or assertions that Wikipedia is "shaping the narrative". — The Hand That Feeds You:Bite 20:16, 14 March 2024 (UTC) |
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The following discussion has been closed. Please do not modify it. |
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- Yes, we have primary sources in the form of Chris Kindred's social media posts, but apparently primary sources aren't accepted here. Android927 (talk) 12:56, 13 March 2024 (UTC)
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- https://archive.ph/Oiqyb Kaijyuu2016 (talk) 13:12, 13 March 2024 (UTC)
- Thanks for the link. Niche Gamer is considered unreliable per WP:VG/S. – Rhain ☔ (he/him) 13:15, 13 March 2024 (UTC)
- So is Kotaku and it's still here despite the article clearly being biased. You’re just as biased. Kaijyuu2016 (talk) 13:47, 13 March 2024 (UTC)
- No, Kotaku is not considered unreliable per WP:VG/S. If you have issues with my conduct wrt NPOV, take it to WP:POVN or WP:ANI. Thanks. – Rhain ☔ (he/him) 13:50, 13 March 2024 (UTC)
- Do any of these work for you? Kaijyuu2016 (talk) 14:29, 13 March 2024 (UTC)
- You do know that Mercante is the SENIOR EDITOR right?
- She decided what gets published.
- Not really an unbiased person and shouldnt be taken as a reliable source. Selo007 (talk) 22:31, 25 March 2024 (UTC)
- With all due respect, you've made your opinion on this very clear. Cheers. Dumuzid (talk) 22:46, 25 March 2024 (UTC)
- No, Kotaku is not considered unreliable per WP:VG/S. If you have issues with my conduct wrt NPOV, take it to WP:POVN or WP:ANI. Thanks. – Rhain ☔ (he/him) 13:50, 13 March 2024 (UTC)
- So is Kotaku and it's still here despite the article clearly being biased. You’re just as biased. Kaijyuu2016 (talk) 13:47, 13 March 2024 (UTC)
- Thanks for the link. Niche Gamer is considered unreliable per WP:VG/S. – Rhain ☔ (he/him) 13:15, 13 March 2024 (UTC)
- https://archive.ph/Oiqyb Kaijyuu2016 (talk) 13:12, 13 March 2024 (UTC)
- The SBI Employee directly saying it on Twitter is a reliable primary source 122.213.236.124 (talk) 00:21, 13 March 2024 (UTC)
- It actually isn't, for several reasons. For one thing, the post above characterizes it as
harassment
, which is an WP:EXCEPTIONAL claim (and WP:BLP-sensitive in this context, since it's being applied to a specific living person.) That means it would require a secondary source; the one secondary source that does directly mention the tweet in question indicates that the concerns that Steam's policies were being violated were valid, and another source notes that the group had to clean things up after Steam contacted them, which likewise implies they were in violation. Ultimately we rely on secondary sources to interpret primary sources in order to resolve this problem; and the secondary sources support the text we currently have. --Aquillion (talk) 01:29, 13 March 2024 (UTC)
- It actually isn't, for several reasons. For one thing, the post above characterizes it as
- I will say, ignoring all the other aspects going around, I do think we should try to legitimately source the facts through reliable soruces that 1) the initial tweets of the one SBI employee to call out the steam curator group did end up being treated as harassment by X and thus led to the account being blocked, 2) at least one other SBI followed up without engaging in harassment to try to urge followers to report the group to Valve, 3) that attention from multiple SBI employees increased the groups numbers by 10-fold (a type of Streisand effect) and 4) the founder of the curator group did respond to Valve's warnings to remove most of the forum posts and otherwise took steps to bring the curator group into compliance with Steam's AUP, and also 5) created a situation that started running through social media and leading to journalistic interest in it. The Mary Sue article somewhat gets to all these points but not all of them. All those are reasonable neutral facts that explain why we have a section now on the SBI page to explain a controversy. But as reiterated over this page, we need non-first party reliable sources that explicitly say this, no random connecting-the-dots, I just don't think that once we find sources for those, this type of detailing of the timeline is a neutrality problem. --Masem (t) 04:33, 13 March 2024 (UTC)
- FWIW, 4 is already mentioned (albeit briefly) and I've expanded 1. – Rhain ☔ (he/him) 04:44, 13 March 2024 (UTC)
- I absolutely do not think that that is enough (and I think that this is a clear-cut BLP issue; Gry Online may be usable for videogame trivia, but looking over it, I think that it is bluntly clear that it is not sufficient for something highly BLP-sensitive like this.) Even without a name, it is obvious that the individual written here is a potential target, meaning the risk of harm to their reputation is extremely high; higher-quality sources are necessary. If you absolutely think Gry Online is sufficiently high quality for this we can take it to WP:RSN, but please don't restore it here with just that source alone. I hold by my previous statement that still we don't have enough sourcing to mention this aspect at all and have to approach it carefully, but in this aspect in particular we would need better sourcing than one line from a single source that is only VGRS. --Aquillion (talk) 09:59, 13 March 2024 (UTC)
- Yes, I was clear above that while these element should be so thing we should strive to include as neutral facets of the issue, we need RSes to explicitly say that before we can include. I agree with the questionable nature of that Gry source. Masem (t) 14:23, 13 March 2024 (UTC)
- are we going to at least point out the fact that the user who called out this steam curator group got banned for harassment on X? Idk about you but that should be mentioned in their wiki because that's pretty crucial and very literal information regardless of what side or stance you have in this situation. This is pretty common knowledge that everyone can agree happened, and not including it shows your bias in the situation. And might lead people to believe you're defending one side by keeping the page vague. We're not trying to force a particular narrative on Wikipedia, we just want people to know the facts, and then they can do their own digging and form their own opinion from there. I understand that this situation is a bit sensitive and it's hard to tell what information to trust, but there is real proof of Sweet Baby Inc employees causing misconduct from simple research. AnonymouEevee (talk) 16:11, 24 March 2024 (UTC)
- Who is this "we"? Acroterion (talk) 16:22, 24 March 2024 (UTC)
- The employee's Twitter account being blocked for that is such a tiny part of the larger story, and yet I see so many in trying to defend the curator group and those arguing against SBI, claiming this is a huge part of the story because to them, it appears to be a "win" that this employees' account "attacked" the curator account and thus trying to justify that SBI harassed them, just as much as others have been harassing SBI and thus making it a "both sides equal" story. Yes, the employee's tweet likely violated Twitter's TOS by linking the different accounts, but other SBI employees pointed out the group without any effects, so that really is a trivial factor that, unless reported by RS sources, is something we aren't going to force into the article. Masem (t) 16:32, 24 March 2024 (UTC)
- "we" meaning everyone else in this comment section saying exactly what I'm trying to point out. But are missing the mark
- Also, no, including the fact that Chris Kindred was banned on X should be noted because it's a pretty big story right now, and a lot of people are talking about it. At least acknowledging that fact should be enough info to encourage the reader to do digging into the situation if they wish too and form their own opinion. Not including this makes people think that there is no drama and that Sweet Baby Inc has a completely clean image. The allegations of racism from the employees should also be noted because it's also being talked about, and again not mentioning it on the wiki gives people the false impression that they have a clean image and that there's no controversy. Which is why people are coming to these comment sections to make sure people know about what others are saying about this company AnonymouEevee (talk) 16:47, 24 March 2024 (UTC)
- "Its a big story" only appears to apply to the groups and forum that are critical of SBI's work including the curator group. It is clear that the sum of all SBI employees' tweets created a Streisand effect that drew members to the group, which we do have documented, but simply because one of them was blocked doesn't matter to that point.
- As well as the claims of racism, which have been disproven by independent reporters to show that the basis for these claims of racism have been take way out of context, and part of the conspiracy theories that have been attributed to the curator group and other forums. Masem (t) 16:55, 24 March 2024 (UTC)
- I concur. I would also add that "it's a pretty big story right now" should be an indication of caution rather than inclusion. Wikipedia is not newsmedia and it is likely far to early to determine if Chris Kindred getting kicked off a dying social media web page has even a smidge of encyclopedic relevance. Simonm223 (talk) 16:59, 24 March 2024 (UTC)
- it is a big story because a very loud majority of gamers have expressed their criticism for this group, and the criticism should be noted. Silencing these people shows a clear bias, and also damages Wikipedia's reputation. Someone's going to hear about whats going on and they're going to read this one sided wikipedia article and logically take it all as fact without doing any research. Which is why it's important to list the other side so people can form their own opinion and not what one side says. Also, Wikipedia doesnt have to be news media to show that a lot of people have been critical of sweet baby inc, and can reveal the reason for such. But they choose only to show one side, calling the other side harrassers instead of revealing that forced diversity was involved, the very thing the people were complaining about. Furthermore, no the screenshots of white racism were not taken out of context. A lot of the comments were deleted to create plausible deniability, but screenshots exist proving they did indeed happen. And its important to note what sbi employees are doing because it gives insight on who manages this company because it tells people who exactly is making their games and whether they should support the games they work on. And not showing this further proves Wikipedia's bias and that they're supporting one side. AnonymouEevee (talk) 17:40, 24 March 2024 (UTC)
- We don't make articles or include content on Wikipedia just because there's a vocal group of people complaining about something. If Qanon hadn't received any news coverage, we wouldn't have an article on it either. SilverserenC 17:49, 24 March 2024 (UTC)
- Silverseren is correct, Wikipedia editors don't write articles based on who is being loud online. I'll also add that this is a request for WP:FALSEBALANCE, which is something the Wikipedia community has specifically rejected. Wikipedia does not give equal validity to 'sides' of a dispute, it follows along with whatever the reliable sources do. You also might want to have a look at WP:YESBIAS. MrOllie (talk) 17:52, 24 March 2024 (UTC)
- are we going to at least point out the fact that the user who called out this steam curator group got banned for harassment on X? Idk about you but that should be mentioned in their wiki because that's pretty crucial and very literal information regardless of what side or stance you have in this situation. This is pretty common knowledge that everyone can agree happened, and not including it shows your bias in the situation. And might lead people to believe you're defending one side by keeping the page vague. We're not trying to force a particular narrative on Wikipedia, we just want people to know the facts, and then they can do their own digging and form their own opinion from there. I understand that this situation is a bit sensitive and it's hard to tell what information to trust, but there is real proof of Sweet Baby Inc employees causing misconduct from simple research. AnonymouEevee (talk) 16:11, 24 March 2024 (UTC)
- Yes, I was clear above that while these element should be so thing we should strive to include as neutral facets of the issue, we need RSes to explicitly say that before we can include. I agree with the questionable nature of that Gry source. Masem (t) 14:23, 13 March 2024 (UTC)
- I absolutely do not think that that is enough (and I think that this is a clear-cut BLP issue; Gry Online may be usable for videogame trivia, but looking over it, I think that it is bluntly clear that it is not sufficient for something highly BLP-sensitive like this.) Even without a name, it is obvious that the individual written here is a potential target, meaning the risk of harm to their reputation is extremely high; higher-quality sources are necessary. If you absolutely think Gry Online is sufficiently high quality for this we can take it to WP:RSN, but please don't restore it here with just that source alone. I hold by my previous statement that still we don't have enough sourcing to mention this aspect at all and have to approach it carefully, but in this aspect in particular we would need better sourcing than one line from a single source that is only VGRS. --Aquillion (talk) 09:59, 13 March 2024 (UTC)
- FWIW, 4 is already mentioned (albeit briefly) and I've expanded 1. – Rhain ☔ (he/him) 04:44, 13 March 2024 (UTC)
Unfortunately it further proves my point that Wikipedia is a biased source. Their policies only supports secondary sources over first hand sources and accounts, which is why it's gradually becoming unreliable for a lot of people. It benefits triple a game journalists who don't care about games, over people who are truly passionate for the games they play and want their voices to be heard about what they want for the markey. This is the last time I'm going to reply because this debate will ultimately go nowhere due to Wikipedia's policies, but I'm glad I was at least able to contribute to this conversation for onlookers. Hopefully people will boycott this sight and discourage others from using this as a first hand source of info AnonymouEevee (talk) 18:04, 24 March 2024 (UTC)
- A majority according to who? Simonm223 (talk) 18:06, 24 March 2024 (UTC)
- If Wikipedia is "gradually becoming unreliable for a lot of people" due to policies which have been in place from the beginning, then I guess it's about time? People should really be more aware of what they consume, I suppose. Cheers, all. Dumuzid (talk) 19:25, 24 March 2024 (UTC)
Citations and news sites and clickpieces and slop
There have been a great number of discussions opened on this talk page to propose alternate sources; these tend to be largely identical. Somebody will post a link saying "this proves that the stuff in the Wikipedia article is wrong", someone will say that the linked website is some kind of lame clickslop garbage, and it will be thrown in the bin. Perhaps this is true. The ones I have seen so far are: https://mobilesyrup.com/2024/03/16/sweet-baby-controversy-toxic-gamers-stand-up-for-devs-and-media-editorial/ , https://game8.co/articles/latest/sweet-baby-inc-employees-fail-spectacularly-at-trying-to-get-steam-curator-banned , https://www.theshortcut.com/p/sweet-baby-inc-detected-what-actually-happened , https://www.geeksandgamers.com/sweet-baby-inc-does-exactly-what-gamers-think-they-do/ , https://www.geeknewsnow.net/index.php/2024/03/08/sweet-baby-inc-when-grifting-goes-wrong/ , https://thatparkplace.com/sweet-baby-inc-employee-begs-followers-to-report-steam-curator-that-tracks-sweet-baby-inc-s-involvement-in-video-games/ , https://nichegamer.com/sweet-baby-employees-incite-harassment-campaign-against-steam-curator/
These sites look pretty mid to me, and some of them look bad. They are mostly what we call "video game journalism".
I don't think we should be citing stuff to sources where the editorial oversight and quality of writing/research is demonstrably much poorer than our own.
Most websites that claim to do journalism about video games, to be blunt, do not. To the extent they do, it seems to be a small minority of their output, which is predominantly clickable content-mill stuff regurgitated from industry press releases, and occasional "tweetalism" articles about a viral social media post (which tend to consist entirely of embedding the post and making some vague commentary about how it "just won the Internet" etc). For example, if we look at the front page of Kotaku right now, here is what it has:
- 18 Things We Learned From The Acolyte Trailer
- Overwatch 2 Is Reverting One Of The Sequel’s Most Controversial Changes
- Fallout TV Series First Official Clip Is Actually Very Funny
- How To Complete ‘Stuck In A Rut’ In FF7 Rebirth
- How To Romance Tifa In FF7 Rebirth
- FF7 Rebirth’s Best Materia For Buffing Your Party
- How To Get Goat Milk In Unicorn Overlord
- All The Unicorn Overlord And FF7 Rebirth Tips You Need
- Unicorn Overlord: The Kotaku Review
- Skull And Bones: The Kotaku Review
- Final Fantasy VII Rebirth: The Kotaku Review
- PlayStation Pulse Elite Headset Offers Some Serious Bang For Your Buck
"News" is one of the nine separate subsections of the main page of the site. Clicking on it, we get a few of those articles from the front page, as well as:
- Destiny 2’s Newest Mode Delivers Something Fans Have Waited Years For
- 18 Things We Learned From The Acolyte Trailer
- Someone At A Flea Market Couldn't Give Away Copies Of NBA 2k19
- Massive Dragon's Dogma 2 Spoilers Leak Days Before Release
None of these are really news. They are mostly press releases from video game companies -- with some video game reviews (essentially blog posts) and a couple tweetpieces. Most concerning to me are the undisclosed affiliate marketing posts -- the post about the PlayStation headset has not one but two line-spanning large bright buttons to buy it from Best Buy, which has a Kotaku affiliate marketing link (https://howl.me/clFYghE6Uld
, which redirects to https://www.bestbuy.com/site/-/6567072.p?cmp=RMX&nrtv_cid=64bc791c1371d3764b43e73146d231368b93cd79a818f0041cc1cafe235f6884&utm_source=narrativ&ar=1837046648727687202
). Generally, when websites and blogs do affiliate marketing promotional posts where they make money from people buying the product, they disclose this somewhere in the article. They have not done this.
While I certainly agree that being primarily a review/walkthrough website does not militate strongly towards something being an acceptable source for contentious topics, it seems rather silly to raise this standard only for the sources that have been provided so far, whereas the article currently has... twelve citations to a single page on Kotaku. I suppose the relevant question, then, is not "is this site a credible source?", but rather "is this site at least as credible as Kotaku, a tabloid/blog whose posts have undisclosed affiliate marketing links?" It seems noteworthy that at least some of the central issue here (?) is people having some beef with Kotaku specifically, which makes it especially questionable to lean on it so heavily as a source -- hasn't a site who isn't involved in this idiotic online argument weighed in?
I am not particularly interested in the political dimensions of this, nor do I play video games very often (and what games I do play are open source) -- to be blunt, I do not really give a hoot about whether these guys are woke bluehairs ruining video games 4EVAR!!!!! or whether the other guys are sleazy creepazoid far-wing-alt-whatever. These things should not really be a consideration when we evaluate sources; my concern here is that using low-quality sources causes us to write low-quality articles, and we should be seriously committed to citing things to credible outlets. jp×g🗯️ 09:17, 23 March 2024 (UTC)
- None of those sites you've listed are what we'd seriously consider as "video game journalism" as none of them have a history of fact checking or editorial control, nor are recognized by the larger video game community. Kotaku has been, despite the changes they have gone through. Plenty of other known RSes using undisclosed marketing links, but that's not a concern under WP:V for reliable sources.
- It is also important that from the nature of the controversy around SBI, it was Kotaku that broke the story to the larger world, and since then, multiple sites have confirmed the story, refering the Kotaku story. Hence why many of the references are to Kotaku. Attempts to undermind the reliability of Kotaku, as to thus either claim we shouldn't cover the controversy or that we should include lesser sites make no sense at this point. If Kotaku was the only source covering this, then I would agree its too much, but with the numerous other RSes that have validated the story, there's zero reason to put any doubt into inclusion of the Kotaku story at this point. Masem (t) 12:40, 23 March 2024 (UTC)
- No, Kotaku didn't break this to a wider world. It were YouTube Creators who did. Kotaku wrote a (very biased) piece and other Media outlets refer to it because they don't do any original research, at all. USEBYOTHERS is a pretty neat thing, but here it just proves to be fatally flawed. Not that it matters. The Fact that the Factchecking, you all inquire so much about, is not done in this particular instance by Kotaku or any of the follow ups, is mindbogeling.
WP:NOTFORUM. This talk page is to discuss the article, not the topic generally. ☔
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The following part might be considered OR so take it with a grain of salt. If the harassment, like stated in the source, was solely because the steam group wanted to attack SBI (and the Author of the hitpiece), why is it that the percived perpetrator (the Kurator of said steam kurator group) was attacked first by an employee of SBI on X, and only then the backslash started? (as BLP says X is not reliable, but thats where this clusterfuck started) If the Steam Kurator Group (wich essentially lists just the games SBI worked on/was asked for consel, which are avaible on SBI's website, so same information) somehow deframed SBI, how comes that the group is within the TOS of Steam's Kurator Programm? That parts of the attached forum where purged is absolutly irrelevant to this fact. |
- If the Kotaku Author did not involve herself in a harassment campaign of her own making and recived backkash because of it, would it affect the reliabillity of her piece? (again BLP and X)
- Context matters. Adtonko (talk) 13:29, 24 March 2024 (UTC)
- The harassment came after she wrote the article, so it has no relevance to the article's reliability (not that it would anyway). And, to clarify, other media outlets certainly did do their own research and fact-checking. – Rhain ☔ (he/him) 14:08, 24 March 2024 (UTC)
I whooleheartently have to disagree with you on that. She initiated the harasment. Thats why the Article is a harassment piece in and of itself. And she earned backslash for it. Tahts how harassment works nowadays aparrently. -- Adtonko (talk) 06:41, 25 March 2024 (UTC)
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- Only replying to the part about YouTube creators that broke it - maybe within the gaming community, the highlighting of how the SBI employees were calling for the curator group to be removed via youtube videos may have increased attention there, but that's only with the circle of gamers and likely a small subset of them, and certainly not to the world at large. Kotaku is a recognized source for gaming news across the media (even if their quality is no longer as good as it was) and it is recognized there that they broke the story about SBI getting harassed by gamers and the use of disproven conspiracy theories that SBI was forcing all those games to go "woke". Again, I'm seeing the pattern from GamerGate, but there, while there may have been some gamers that thought initially the protest was about "ethics in game journalism" but eventually was throws out the door, the side here trying to latch on to "SBI did a bad thing, the curator group was only listing games and not telling ppl to avoid" and a whole bunch of other excuses have quickly been proven wrong, and the attempts to discredit Kotaku here isn't going to change what has been published since. — Masem (t) 14:19, 24 March 2024 (UTC)
- Thing is Kotaku is an active participant here. It's senior editors have been involved in the initial doxing attempt of the users in the steam/discord group failing which they tried to go after several high profile gamers/ content creators. This brings the entire stuff they write regarding this into question.
- Of course recurring issue here being sources can't be cited due to Wikipedia:No original research. 58.84.60.110 (talk) 17:05, 24 March 2024 (UTC)
- This is a powerful endorsement of the criticality of WP:NOR to the health of the project. It provides a barrier against a flood of conspiracy theories and gossip. Simonm223 (talk) 17:09, 24 March 2024 (UTC)
- Or that verifiability and neutral point of view can be in direct conflict when journalists cited as sources are the stakeholders. Even if the sources are straight from horse's mouth. 58.84.60.110 (talk) 17:48, 24 March 2024 (UTC)
- During GamerGate pt1 we saw a lot of this notion that if one 'side' of a dispute attacked journalism, that means Wikipedia could then not use journalists as a source. Since then, the same attacks have become extremely common in all kinds of political discourse (think of people who say 'Lamestream media'). But buying into that notion is untenable, one cannot silence critical sources just by making attacks on any journalist who writes something one disapproves of. If Wikipedia bought into this argument we would have to say goodbye to almost every source we have on politics, on vaccines, climate change, etc. MrOllie (talk) 17:57, 24 March 2024 (UTC)
- Only replying to the part about YouTube creators that broke it - maybe within the gaming community, the highlighting of how the SBI employees were calling for the curator group to be removed via youtube videos may have increased attention there, but that's only with the circle of gamers and likely a small subset of them, and certainly not to the world at large. Kotaku is a recognized source for gaming news across the media (even if their quality is no longer as good as it was) and it is recognized there that they broke the story about SBI getting harassed by gamers and the use of disproven conspiracy theories that SBI was forcing all those games to go "woke". Again, I'm seeing the pattern from GamerGate, but there, while there may have been some gamers that thought initially the protest was about "ethics in game journalism" but eventually was throws out the door, the side here trying to latch on to "SBI did a bad thing, the curator group was only listing games and not telling ppl to avoid" and a whole bunch of other excuses have quickly been proven wrong, and the attempts to discredit Kotaku here isn't going to change what has been published since. — Masem (t) 14:19, 24 March 2024 (UTC)
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- Journalists are not "stakeholders" in any rational sense. This whole argument that we have to disregard journalists because they're a "side" in this situation is utter nonsense and will not result in Wikipedia changing its practices. — The Hand That Feeds You:Bite 20:44, 25 March 2024 (UTC)
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- " it was Kotaku that broke the story to the larger world, and since then, multiple sites have confirmed the story"
- The other sites havent done any journalism of investigation on their own, they are just quoting the Kotaku article.
- That is not "confirming" Selo007 (talk) 07:45, 26 March 2024 (UTC)
- Even a quick glance at articles from several other outlets prove that they have performed their own investigations. Very few have relied solely on Kotaku's article. – Rhain ☔ (he/him) 07:48, 26 March 2024 (UTC)
- Kotaku is certainly clickbaity, and I have the same concerns you do about the affiliate link, but otherwise I'm not sure what this is supposed to prove. Of course a video game news site is going to be mostly news about (specific) video games. Reviews, spoilers, and so on are video game news. Not every site can be People Make Games and only do hard-hitting investigative journalism about video games. (And even they have relatively fluffy stuff.) Loki (talk) 21:09, 23 March 2024 (UTC)
- One small note The Mary Sue article [8] is entirely derivative on other sources also included. As such it's probably irrelevant and, given the tendency of TMS to blend editorializing with news without labeling it as such, would probably constitute a source to remove. From what I can see this would have slim to no overall impact on page content. Simonm223 (talk) 15:43, 26 March 2024 (UTC)
- While I have a generally low opinion of Kotaku as a source I read the Mercante article and, from a perspective of journalistic methodology, notwithstanding her ideological position entirely, it's pretty decent practice. I would treat this specific article (and exclusively this article) as being just as reliable as any other mainstream newsmedia source. IE: In my ideal world I'd eliminate them all from Wikipedia entirely but I wouldn't eliminate this one before taking out the NYT and, recognizing my opinion about WP:NOTNEWS is a minority one I would support a consensus decision of inclusion in this context. Simonm223 (talk) 15:48, 26 March 2024 (UTC)
Comment
I'm not sure one of the sources that show that sweet baby ink was harassed is showing what it says it does. it's all alleged. and it's Amanda Marquette even then the fact is that (BLP violation removed) and tried to flag their personal account that (BLP violation removed) . in fact I have the source a lot of people have the source of the original tweet even screenshots and the like ==
forgive the errors with my text to speech conception but there's a lot of problems with the article and the sources of the harassment that sweet baby Inc encountered doesn't seem to be entirely there or extent. I have primary sources that show that(BLP violation removed) and that journalists have also engaged in harassment in order to defend sweet baby. such as explicitly asking individuals why they don't use their name and real face.
this article and many others like it have screenshots and Archives of the tweets were (BLP violation removed).
the sourcesthat come with the claim of sweet baby Incorporated receiving threats do not seem to yield any concrete proof or instance or even example of such things. other than a reporter's word for it. could we please edit the article and such a way that it would reflect this? they mean these are material facts MisteOsoTruth (talk) 02:50, 26 March 2024 (UTC)
- You might wanna read the "Harassment from SBI" section. I think your concerns have already been adressed there Trade (talk) 03:06, 26 March 2024 (UTC)
- Is the source reliable? @FMSky:--Trade (talk) 03:28, 26 March 2024 (UTC)
- No. It's quite evidently just another post-gamergate anti-woke forum with a blog appended.Simonm223 (talk) 14:04, 26 March 2024 (UTC)
- Look, MisteOsoTruth it doesn't matter whether it true or not. If we can't verify it according to our (very high) standards then we can't add it. There is no more to it Trade (talk) 03:29, 26 March 2024 (UTC)
- im not sure if the wiki standards are high to be honest. The article claims that the info came from one place whilst the link in the article shows the discourse started elsewhere and was shared at kiwifarm. Because the article claims one thing which isn't true, wiki has to show that info.
- While the info from kiwifarms was the ignition for the controversy, it wasn't the origin.
- This bit of info can't be edited because of the existing editing standards which claim that articles are either factual or not, but not both even if they may fall into that category in one article. 220.240.44.90 (talk) 08:10, 26 March 2024 (UTC)
- and if there was an archive link to such tweets? and ... it's odd to me that some of those high standards are gone when there's little but allegations of abuse against Sweet Baby Inc and no proof.
- Talking badly about a company seems very different. and the whole issue kicked off to a fever pitch with various sources reporting. but even the Verge article suggests that Sweet Baby Inc's staff engaged in bad practices.
- there's a lack of good faith going on. MisteOsoTruth (talk) 14:02, 26 March 2024 (UTC)
- The problem with primary sources is that one has to interpret the meaning and importance the sources themselves. Since wikipedia can be edited by anyone and since most editors are (pseudo-)anonymous, we cannot determine whether such an interpretation is made by someone who is well informed about the situation or whether they simply are someone who doesn't have the skills or knowledge to interpret such things. This is why RSs are so important, as a community we have decided that RSs have the knowledge and skills to evaluate primary sources and thus we use those as our sources.
- There is no way for us, internet users hiding behind a username, to confirm that we can give the correct interpretation of tweets and pictures, and if we would start doing that, how would we confirm the correct interpretation? Wikipedia just says: Our users aren't those who determine what is the correct interpretation, they just seek for reliable sources that interpret.
- That is not bad faith, it is skepticism, something dearly needed in a place where everyone can edit.
- Speederzzz (Talk) (Stalk me) 14:16, 26 March 2024 (UTC)
- We don't do investigative reporting, that original research. Instead we rely on independent, secondary, reliable sources to do that investigation and summarize what they found. Further that's why we use sources with a history of fact checking and editorial oversight so that we can presume their investigative reporting is factually correct. Just because they have appeared to taken a side in this doesn't make them unreliable. I would assume that if SBI was seen to be engaging in the same bad practices that those harassing SBI and others, that these sources would also report that, but that's not happening. It still comes down to that the one employee getting their Twitter blocked is a tiny drop compared to what has been thrown at SBI, and thus likely why it's not covered in these sources Masem (t) 14:20, 26 March 2024 (UTC)
- i don't think you fully understand. to say it's a drop is not true. that was the "inciting incident:".
- and there's even LESS evidence of Sweet Baby getting any harassment, just hear say
- (BLP violation removed). as shown by archive links and the like.
- that's it. this is a matter of fact taking sides or no. I dont' mean to be rude. But wouldn't taking sides mean that same person should recuse themselves? MisteOsoTruth (talk) 14:07, 27 March 2024 (UTC)
- The inciting incident was at least as early as the creation of the curator group which at the time it was formed used images and included language that attacked SBI, most which has been scrubbed to abide by Team's AUP. Even earlier was the attention drawn to SBI in wake of the commercial failure of Suicide Squad on boards like Kiwi Farms and 8chan that made a tenacious connection between the quality of the game and SBI's involvement ( which has been disproven).
- The SBI employee tweet was part of the picture in only that it created a Steisand effect drawing more ppl to the group. It certainly did not set it off. Masem (t) 14:25, 27 March 2024 (UTC)
- Furthermore the archive links you're pointing to largely fall under WP:NOR and, I get this is frustrating, but an encyclopedia just isn't the appropriate place for internet drama that hasn't got significant coverage. And a bunch of low-tier gamer blogs that scrape "news" from other sources and then paste in their opinions to drive clicks isn't significant coverage - especially when those blogs so obviously come from the Gamergate-adjacent far-right gaming ecosystem which is notorious for blending reportage with editorial, treating rumour as reportage and straight up fabrication. Simonm223 (talk) 15:13, 27 March 2024 (UTC)
- that's it. this is a matter of fact taking sides or no. I dont' mean to be rude. But wouldn't taking sides mean that same person should recuse themselves? MisteOsoTruth (talk) 14:07, 27 March 2024 (UTC)
archive link to the (BLP violation removed)
at least the archive link is in the original code. that's strange. it's almost as if they dont' want others in the talk page to see it.
you can say fabrications and low tier gaming blog or whatever, but surpressing the archive link to a tweet. that is of material importance is a bad thing.
Twitter's community notes are doing a better job of source citations. that's not a good thing. — Preceding unsigned comment added by MisteOsoTruth (talk • contribs) 12:57, 29 March 2024 (UTC)
chris kindred (@itskindred): "The @Steam curator (BLP violation removed) group Sweet Baby Inc detected is lead by this person, (BLP violation removed). Here's them trying to be slick so they don't get reported. Even with the discriminatory language filed off, the group itself still fails the code of conduct." | nitter.poast.org (archive.is)
archive link to the (BLP violation removed).
there's other archives on archives.today. you'll need to adjust your proxy settings tos ee it. and SIMOON... YOU ARE NOT UNBIASED. MisteOsoTruth (talk) 14:26, 26 March 2024 (UTC)
- Spamming archive links and screenshots onto this page over and over is not going to accomplish anything. This has been discussed over and over. Kindly stop disrupting the talk page. MrOllie (talk) 14:28, 26 March 2024 (UTC)
- I mean most of what I've done is confirm a source (Mobile Syrup) is of moderate reliability (roughly equivalent to Kotaku) as a source, state that another source did not appear reliable because it was principally a game forum webpage with a blog attached and collapse a comment section per WP:NOTFORUM. If you think my mild peculiarities of having a particularly strict interpretation of WP:NOTNEWS and thus having particularly high standards for news sources constitutes a bias then I'm sort of scratching my head. Also please note that while editors should comport themselves per WP:NPOV there is nothing in Wikipedia policy that prohibits editors from having opinions, or even biases, as long as they edit with the goal of neutrality. Simonm223 (talk) 15:29, 26 March 2024 (UTC)
- Why are you responding to something aimed at MisteOsoTruth? Trade (talk) 19:09, 26 March 2024 (UTC)
- Yeah. Simonm223 (talk) 19:43, 26 March 2024 (UTC)
- I think they just indented it wrong; it was intended as a reply to MisteOsoTruth, hence the bit responding to their allegation of biases. --Aquillion (talk) 19:59, 26 March 2024 (UTC)
- Yes it was a reply, sorry, to MisteOsoTruth. Simonm223 (talk) 20:02, 26 March 2024 (UTC)
- Why are you responding to something aimed at MisteOsoTruth? Trade (talk) 19:09, 26 March 2024 (UTC)
- are they not primary sources? MisteOsoTruth (talk) 14:04, 27 March 2024 (UTC)
- They are not reliable sources. Also they violate WP:BLP in some cases. Simonm223 (talk) 15:23, 27 March 2024 (UTC)
- As Simonm223 says, these sources are not reliable for the use you want to put them to, and remember that in general, Wikipedia prefers high quality secondary sources; less interpretation is needed as compared to primary sources. Cheers. Dumuzid (talk) 15:31, 27 March 2024 (UTC)
- I mean most of what I've done is confirm a source (Mobile Syrup) is of moderate reliability (roughly equivalent to Kotaku) as a source, state that another source did not appear reliable because it was principally a game forum webpage with a blog attached and collapse a comment section per WP:NOTFORUM. If you think my mild peculiarities of having a particularly strict interpretation of WP:NOTNEWS and thus having particularly high standards for news sources constitutes a bias then I'm sort of scratching my head. Also please note that while editors should comport themselves per WP:NPOV there is nothing in Wikipedia policy that prohibits editors from having opinions, or even biases, as long as they edit with the goal of neutrality. Simonm223 (talk) 15:29, 26 March 2024 (UTC)
This is a corporation with no stream of income at all.
that seems odd 2604:3D09:D78:1000:A5EC:A7E5:FE1A:4D55 (talk) 18:08, 5 April 2024 (UTC) |