This is a proposed policy.
The goal of Ireland Information Guide is to become a complete, accurate encyclopedia. Verifiability is an important tool to achieve accuracy, so we strongly encourage you to check your facts. However, don't be too keen to remove unverified information at the cost of completeness.
We also aim to be Informative and neutral.
| Table of contents |
Fact checking is tedious, time consuming, and not particularly rewarding. It is unfair to make later editors dig for sources, particularly when the initial content is questionable. Those who write articles likely to be deemed in need of fact checking, for whatever reason, should expect to assist by providing references, ideally when the article is first written. Because of this, it's important to make it easy to verify the accuracy and neutrality of your content. Citing your sources is an important part of this, but not the only factor. Another good rule of thumb is to be specific (and avoid weasel words). For example:
This is difficult to verify, because it's hard to know where to start. Many spokespeople may have commented about the incident on many dates and on many occasions, and it's unreasonable to expect someone to check all these statements looking for the one that matches. A better phrasing would be:
This is easy to verify: one could contact Eliza Twisk, or Channel 4, or Amnesty International. As the exact quote is given, rather than a paraphrase, this can be fed into various search engines. Finally, a URL of a transcript is given.
There are degrees of verifiability. At the one end, there are facts that can be verified fairly quickly by most editors, requiring only resources available over the internet, or at the local library. At the other end of the scale are facts that can only be verified by subject matter experts.
In general, consider the kinds of people who are likely to edit the article in question: the article should be verifiable by these people. Therefore, an article on a sociology topic might include content that can only be verified by a sociologist - perhaps referencing some standard sociology text. However, it should probably not include content that can only be verified by a physicist, because physicists are not likely to be spending their time reading and editing our physics articles.
If you are writing on a well-studied field, then it's possible that most of the editors will be reasonably acquainted with the topic, and you can be a bit more relaxed about verifiability. However, if you are writing about a more obscure topic, then you may find that many of the editors have never previously heard of the thing you are writing about, and you should take this into account.
There are several reasons you might want to verify something in an article:
Here's a suggested procedure for verifying content.
Once you've successfully verified something, consider whether you can edit either the article, or the talk page, to make it easier for the next person.
For an encyclopedia, sources should be unimpeachable. An encyclopedia is not primary source material. Its authors do not conduct interviews nor perform original research. Hence, anything we include should have been covered in the records, reportage, research, or studies of others. In many, if not most, cases there should be several corroborating sources available should someone wish to consult them. Sources should be unimpeachable relative to the claims made; outlandish claims beg strong sources.
Sometimes a particular statement can only be verified at a place of dubious reliability, such as a weblog or a tabloid newspaper. If the statement is relatively unimportant, then just remove it - don't waste words on statements of limited interest and dubious truth. However, if you must keep it, then attribute it to the source in question. For example:
This is similar to how we try to achieve a neutral point of view.
Verifiability is one problem with articles on obscure subjects. If an article covers a subject which has never been written about in published sources, or which has only been written about in sources of doubtful credibility, it is difficult to verify the information. To do so would require original research, and it has been agreed that Ireland Information Guide is not a place to publish original research. Insistence on verifiability is often sufficient to exclude such articles. Some Ireland Information Guide users say that verifiability is the only criterion needed to decide whether something should be kept, so that any verifiable fact can be included. They often cite Wiki is not paper - in particular the fact that there is no shortage of space - in support of this.
Other Ireland Information Guide users say that verifiability is not enough, and that other conditions (usually something they call "importance") are also needed. They say that relying on verifiability alone leads to a tendency to concentrate on recent trivia - celebrity gossip can be verified from current newspapers, whereas events in the past can be harder to locate documentation for. They consider this to be a bad thing, leading to reduced credibility for the project.
See Ireland Information Guide:Criteria for inclusion of biographies and Ireland Information Guide:auto-biography for some suggested criteria for inclusion of biographical articles.
"Doveriai no proveriai"-Russian proverb (Trust but verify)