Hi Jane, Erika, and everybody else,

As a relatively recent contributor to Wikidata, I have been struggling to
understand the objections to the Black Lunch Table's use of the catalog
property and the points of view behind this discussion. I have read all the
emails, and all the linked to discussion and talk pages, and finally had to
go back to tracing all the Q and P entries and their parent classes
mentioned in those discussion, to come up with my own understanding of the
situation from basic principles. It has taken hours, and given how much
effort has gone into the various discussions in the different locations it
is frustrating that (as far as I have seen) no one objecting to the usage
has been sufficiently clear what the problem is, or the exact nature of the
'abuse'.

I don't think it is as obvious as some are claiming it to be. Nor do I
think all people claiming the abuse are even aligned on what the valid
issues are, since no one has been specific, and in the discussions, various
issues are being conflated.

Given that people here have different backgrounds, languages, are focused
on different tasks, and may not be as intimately familliar with some P and
Q items as others, I believe it is worth spelling out exactly what the
nature of the problem is, especially since I think every one is aware of
the good faith nature of the Black Lunch Table, and presumably aligned in
the goal of making Wikidata better.

I'm replying to Jane's email because this seems like the closest statement
to what I can determine to be a simple valid complaint, I'm going to try to
set it down here clearly so others can agree or disagree whether it is the
entirety of the objection, or if there is more to it:

Q28781198:Black Lunch Table <https://www.wikidata.org/wiki/Q28781198> is
P31:instance <https://www.wikidata.org/wiki/Property:P31> of
Q21025364:WikiProject <https://www.wikidata.org/wiki/Q21025364>

but is being used to populate P972:Catalog
<https://www.wikidata.org/wiki/Property:P972>, which is supposed to
represent an instance of Q2352616:catalog
<https://www.wikidata.org/wiki/Q2352616>
The objection is that anything entered into P972:Catalog *MUST* be
P31:instance of Q2352616:catalog

Is that it?

Perhaps this is obvious after the fact, but I don't think it was obvious
from reading any of the initial objection notifications, or requests for
deletions, or subsequent follow ups. When the usage is made in good faith,
the objection does need to be spelled out so that everyone involved can
check their assumptions and understanding.

If that is the entirety of the objection, I have to agree that it is
technically sound, and hopefully that provides a basis for a solution that
keeps everybody happy.

Some other comments which I hope do not cloud my attempt at clarifying
things:

It seems clear that the Black Lunch Table Wiki Project has a list of
artists they are interested in, so I consider that the Black Lunch Table
catalog is real thing. From my reading of Q2352616:catalog
<https://www.wikidata.org/wiki/Q2352616> there is nothing that strictly
specifies how it must be represented or published, nor can I see anything
clear about how public it needs to be to be valid. These properties would
appear to be inherited from its parent class Q386724:work
<https://www.wikidata.org/wiki/Q386724>  I accept people will have
different opinions about what quality of publishing or how public something
needs to be before it is 'good', but it does not seem like a clear cut
thing, and the arguments could go on and on without much productive
outcome.

Insisting that BLT publish their list elsewhere could be trivially done to
technically meet some publication threshold, and still not be good enough
for some, and would not be a productive use of resources or change anything
in a meaningful way. It might be nice if it were made more accessible
elsewhere, but I don't think it is a technical requirement for BLT to
accomplish what they are trying to do. Feel free to disagree, but the point
I'm trying to make is that I can't see how an objective threshold can be
set here that couldn't be unproductively argued about either way. BLT has a
real catalog, opinions as to its quality, or quality of availability can
vary. I'm sure polite requests to improve things can be made.

One place where another user attempted to clarify a technical objection to
BLT use of catalog is: "

   - More technically: the way how the catalog property is used by BLT is
   technically incorrect, which was mentioned several times and very early as
   well. Catalogs are typically qualifiers to catalog code (P528)
   <https://www.wikidata.org/wiki/Property:P528>, or used in exhibition
   items, but not standalone on items about humans. Editors who spend a lot of
   time to fix wrong property use are not happy if we allow permanent
   exceptions.

—MisterSynergy <https://www.wikidata.org/wiki/User:MisterSynergy> (talk
<https://www.wikidata.org/wiki/User_talk:MisterSynergy>) 08:57, 4 January
2018 (UTC)"
I think the above misses the point, and stumbles on unclear definitions in
the description of P972
https://www.wikidata.org/wiki/Property_talk:P972#Documentation  which
claims the 'Domain' is 'exhibition' which seems an unnecessary elevation of
one catalog type example to some special status. Below is says 'often
exhibition catalog'. Often is fine, it does not mean always though. And
'typically qualifiers to catalog code' may be true, but again it does not
prevent it being used without a catalog code. The Documentation on P972
could be clearer, and I consider that 'Domain': 'exhibition' to be plain
incorrect on that page, which does not help clear interpretations for
anyone.


I see no requirement that the usage of P972:Catalog needs a catalog code
(P528) <https://www.wikidata.org/wiki/Property:P528> (I don't think anyone
has claimed this as an primary objection against BLT catalog usage, but
then it hasn't been clear). Catalogs without codes seem valid in principle,
and my reading of the Wikidata properties is that this is perfectly fine in
Wikidata too.

There seems to be some confusion about the subjects on the BLT catalog
being thought of as attendees of BLT events (I've read this on both sides)
-- individuals on the BLT catalog are there because they are (potentially)
notable artists, and the purpose of BLT is to add all the appropriate links
to show this notability. From what I have read, if an individual is not
really notable and the links don't exist, that entry will be removed _by_
BLT, as that is what the project is about. I would take it on good faith
that anyone on the BLT list is  notable.

Perhaps this raises questions about whether stubs or placeholder entries
are acceptable on Wikidata? Clarity on this would be beneficial to many
other editors and users of Wikidata. Do entries have to be added to
Wikidata fully formed and perfect, or is there some understanding that
items have differing levels of quality and can always be improved? I don't
know. I think very clear statements on this would be useful, as my reading
of https://www.wikidata.org/wiki/Wikidata:Notability
*2) It refers to an instance of a clearly identifiable conceptual or
material entity. The entity must be notable, in the sense that it can be
described using serious and publicly available references.*
is that the threshold for meeting this is very low, and 'identifiable'
means that someone could do it if they tried, not necessarily that all the
links and supporting evidence are immediately available. I could write more
on this, but again it feels like I am conflating issues which isn't helpful.

To summarise  my take on things, I started out neutral and just wanting to
understand what this storm in my inbox was about. Now if I had to chose a
"side", I would side with BLT.

Erika, I hope you don't take my attempt at clarification above as my
personal objection, I'd like to see things resolved in a way that allows
you to proceed with your project!

My attempt at a solution would be to create a BLT catalog which is an
instance of Q2352616:catalog <https://www.wikidata.org/wiki/Q2352616> and
somehow belongs to or is associated with Q28781198:Black Lunch Table, and
use that in all the existing P972:Catalog locations.

Honestly I don't know if that will silence all objections, and it seems a
pretty trivial semantic re-shuffling to add another layer, but it feels
like a technically correct solution to what looks like a valid technical
objection.

Last thing, apparently consensus advice was given to use P972:Catalog in
this way, all I can assume is that either the advice was somehow
mis-communicated or recieved, and the intent of the advice was always to
use a BLT _catalog_ for this purpose, rather than a WikiProject, or that no
one really thought about that aspect of it and the consensus advice was
given and received all in good faith and acted upon by BLT as intended.
Either way, it doesn't seem like that much of a big deal, mistakes are made
and things are overlooked.

If all that is wrong is Q28781198:Black Lunch Table
<https://www.wikidata.org/wiki/Q28781198> needs a Q2352616:catalog
<https://www.wikidata.org/wiki/Q2352616>  instance to use for their
purposes, can we get some confirmation consensus and move forward?

I have already invested enough time into trying to understand this that I'm
willing to help out and make it happen!

Charles Horn.

Wikidata user: Salpynx <https://www.wikidata.org/wiki/User:Salpynx>





On 6 January 2018 at 10:55, Jane Darnell <jane...@gmail.com> wrote:

> I object to your use of the catalog property to link to something that is
> not a catalog. I don't see why my objection leads you to expect me to offer
> an alternative way to track your project. I am not responsible for your
> project and don't understand what it is. If you can't understand that then
> you should not probably not be editing Wikidata.
>
> On Fri, Jan 5, 2018 at 2:33 PM, Brill Lyle <wp.brilll...@gmail.com> wrote:
>
>> Hi Jane,
>>
>> Actually, "the rest of your email is irrelevant" illustrates the
>> problem. I am a bit baffled at this statement.
>>
>> The rest of the email is the *whole point*, and dismissing it
>> illustrates the actual problem here. If Wikidatans don't want to hear about
>> or learn about the context of the problem that needs to be solved, then
>> what's the point of anything here? I was trying to provide background and
>> overview of this problem in my email. If you aren't interested in learning
>> about or hearing about what is trying to be done, then a non-indepth
>> understanding of the issue won't work to provide a solution.
>>
>> This is not a casual, rigid WIKI:Rulez situation. The overarching effort
>> is a goal to integrate Wikidata into the Wikipedia outreach and page
>> improvement / page creation process for multiple projects. We are trying to
>> solve a problem with Wikidata. We are trying to use Wikidata in an outreach
>> project in a new way, a way that previously *had* consensus and *had*
>> implementation that was effective and super functional. If the consensus
>> won't meet community standards, please help us solve the problem by helping
>> us to figure out another solution.
>>
>> The bottom line is that we need to be able to tag items with a unique
>> identifier to connect the Wikidata items to various outreach initiatives.
>> In some way. If that basic functionality is deemed to be not allowed on
>> Wikidata, is deemed to threaten and weaken Wikidata metadata (the latest
>> complaint, along with accusations of the project work being original
>> research, which is a newly creatively inaccurate characterization), if it
>> is deemed not welcome, then let us know. It will negatively affect project
>> outreach and integrated holistic engagement of Wikipedia editing with
>> Wikidata but if that's the bottom line and community consensus, let us know
>> before further work is done. None of us want to waste our time here if the
>> free digital labor is not welcome.
>>
>> - Erika
>>
>>
>> *Erika Herzog*
>> Wikipedia *User:BrillLyle <https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/User:BrillLyle>*
>>
>> On Fri, Jan 5, 2018 at 3:18 AM, Jane Darnell <jane...@gmail.com> wrote:
>>
>>> Yes to exactly this part of your email: "Gerard and I thought we had
>>> consensus on this, but apparently not. We need to find some solution that
>>> will address all concerns."
>>> The rest of your email is irrelevant to using the property for "catalog"
>>> on person items on Wikidata when there is no catalog. Please just publish
>>> the catalog somewhere and then link to it from your "Black Lunch Table"
>>> item. If you don't have a catalog and the project itself is building the
>>> catalog, then this property is definitely the wrong way to go. I have tried
>>> to read through the material you made available, but I still don't see why
>>> this project needs any special property at all when you can create listeria
>>> lists from unordered lists of item numbers. If you have a list anywhere on
>>> a Wikipedia project, you can also run queries using Petscan.
>>>
>>> On Fri, Jan 5, 2018 at 6:12 AM, Brill Lyle <wp.brilll...@gmail.com>
>>> wrote:
>>>
>>>> First off, thanks so much for the support and assistance in
>>>> understanding the work being done here. Thanks to those editors who
>>>> restored the wholesale deletion of the catalog property.
>>>>
>>>> Secondly: While the Black Lunch Table is unique in both its scope and
>>>> outreach, other projects are using the category in actual "real-world
>>>> things." They are not internal WikiProjects.
>>>>
>>>> An example of this is the GLAM project for Colección Patricia Phelps de
>>>> Cisneros (CPPC). CPPC is a large and active private Latin American art
>>>> collection that is improving coverage of Latin American artists on the
>>>> projects, with the intention of adding at minimum articles in English,
>>>> Spanish, and Portuguese. Which is why Wikidata is so helpful, for it's
>>>> language neutral interchangeability of the scaffolding of metadata and the
>>>> establishment of notability via VIAF and other identifiers.
>>>>
>>>> The CPPC GLAM project has multiple task lists and SPARQL queries in
>>>> Listeria tables. CPPC also plans on doing an image donation to the Commons
>>>> in the next 6-12 months as the project develops and as full metadata is
>>>> collected and implemented in the most robust Wikidata-centric way. But
>>>> first the publications and artist metadata needed to be populated.
>>>>
>>>> Here's the task lists: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/
>>>> Wikipedia:GLAM/Colección_Patricia_Phelps_de_Cisneros/Tasks
>>>>
>>>> This is not a WikiProject, but is a GLAM (Galleries, Libraries,
>>>> Archives, Museums) initiative.
>>>>
>>>> So should GLAM outreach and Wikipedia:Meetup projects like BLT have
>>>> something specially created to cover this type of outreach?
>>>>
>>>> I believe that other potential outreach institutional partners would
>>>> want to be implementing usage of Wikidata in this way as well. With this
>>>> Wikidata-in-a-Box approach, the idea is to expand and improve upon common
>>>> outreach requirements (like task lists), setting up a replicable structure
>>>> and process that reduces administrative burden and doesn't require
>>>> re-inventing the wheel over and over again. Because the fact is that there
>>>> is definitely an exponential need for this work -- and this need is only
>>>> going to increase and expand in scope, hopefully. As long as things like
>>>> what happened here don't happen again and discourage this work and destroy
>>>> outreach efforts.
>>>>
>>>> So it would help to have consensus of some type to support this
>>>> outreach going forward.
>>>>
>>>> Gerard and I thought we had consensus on this, but apparently not. We
>>>> need to find some solution that will address all concerns.
>>>>
>>>> Thanks again,
>>>>
>>>> - Erika
>>>>
>>>> *Erika Herzog*
>>>> Wikipedia *User:BrillLyle
>>>> <https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/User:BrillLyle>*
>>>>
>>>> On Thu, Jan 4, 2018 at 11:21 AM, James Heald <jpm.he...@gmail.com>
>>>> wrote:
>>>>
>>>>> Better to use P4570, or a new bespoke property, since the things these
>>>>> people are being tagged to be part of, or participants in, like "Black
>>>>> Lunch Table", are not external real-world things, but internal wiki-world
>>>>> projects.
>>>>>
>>>>> It is useful to maintain a distinction between the two -- it helps to
>>>>> avoid the confusion that has been the root of the issue with P972.
>>>>>
>>>>>  -- James.
>>>>>
>>>>>
>>>>>
>>>>> On 04/01/2018 16:10, Thad Guidry wrote:
>>>>>
>>>>>> "relatedness" or "tagging" is typically handled generically in
>>>>>> Wikidata
>>>>>> through the use of "part of" and "has part" properties.
>>>>>> They work terrifically well to apply some generic classification
>>>>>> needs such
>>>>>> as those of the Black Lunch Table efforts.
>>>>>>
>>>>>> So, an alternative to the current modeling could be...
>>>>>>
>>>>>> Are they only persons ?  if so, mark them as "participant of" ->
>>>>>> "Q28781198" Black Lunch Table
>>>>>> Are the topics needing some "tagging" for classification sometimes
>>>>>> more
>>>>>> than persons ?  if so, mark them as "part of" -> "Q28781198" Black
>>>>>> Lunch
>>>>>> Table
>>>>>>
>>>>>> -Thad
>>>>>>
>>>>>>
>>>>
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>>>>
>>>>
>>>
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>>
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