User:Bawolff/Edit COI Summary/20 per page (alphabetical)/16


COI edit request: update career section and biographical details

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I have a conflict of interest as the subject of this article and would appreciate review by an uninvolved editor.

Recent independent coverage exists regarding the film Hal, written by Mark Edwin Robinson, and I believe the article would benefit from expansion to reflect more recent professional work.

Sources include:

Deadline (February 5, 2026): https://deadline.com/2026/02/alexander-ludwig-emma-roberts-to-star-hal-1236710425/

Deadline (February 19, 2026): https://deadline.com/2026/02/leslie-bibb-jeffrey-donovan-aidan-quinn-join-hal-1236729993/

Deadline (April 29, 2026): https://deadline.com/2026/04/hal-movie-casts-matthew-goode-kate-walsh-garret-dillahunt-more-1236876096/

Thank you for your time and consideration.

Elionfire001 (talk) 04:50, 30 May 2026 (UTC)

Reply 21-JUN-2026

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🔼  Clarification requested  

  • To expedite your request, it would help if you could provide the following information:
  1. Please state each specific desired change and accompanying reference in the form of verbatim statements which can then be added to the article (if approved) by the reviewer.
  2. The exact location where the desired claims are to be placed should be given.
  3. Exact, verbatim descriptions of any text and/or references to be removed should also be given.[1]
  4. Reasons should be provided for each change.[2]
  • In the section of text below titled Sample edit request, the four required items are shown as an example:
  • Kindly open a new edit request at your earliest convenience when ready to proceed with all four items from your request.

References

  1. "Template:Edit COI". Wikipedia. 30 August 2023. Instructions for Submitters: Describe the requested changes in detail. This includes the exact proposed wording of the new material, the exact proposed location for it, and an explicit description of any wording to be removed, including removal for any substitution.
  2. "Template:Edit COI". Wikipedia. 30 August 2023. Instructions for Submitters: If the rationale for a change is not obvious (particularly for proposed deletions), explain.

Thank you! Regards,  Spintendo  10:20, 21 June 2026 (UTC)


COI edit request: Add Hal writing credit

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I have a conflict of interest as the subject of this article and am requesting review by an uninvolved editor.

Please add the following sentence to the end of the Career section, immediately after the paragraph ending with: "He graduated from Linfield Christian School and began writing scripts when he was 16."

Proposed addition: "Robinson wrote the upcoming biographical drama film Hal, directed by Mark Williams and starring Alexander Ludwig, Emma Roberts, Matthew Goode, Leslie Bibb, Aidan Quinn, and Kate Walsh."

References supporting the proposed addition: Deadline (February 5, 2026): https://deadline.com/2026/02/alexander-ludwig-emma-roberts-to-star-hal-1236710425/ Deadline (February 19, 2026): https://deadline.com/2026/02/leslie-bibb-jeffrey-donovan-aidan-quinn-join-hal-1236729993/ Deadline (April 29, 2026): https://deadline.com/2026/04/hal-movie-casts-matthew-goode-kate-walsh-garret-dillahunt-more-1236876096/

Text to be removed: None.

Reason for change: The Career section currently concludes with information regarding Robinson's early career. The proposed addition reflects more recent independently sourced professional work and is supported by multiple reliable secondary sources.

Thank you for your time and consideration. Elionfire001 (talk) 17:42, 23 June 2026 (UTC)


COI edit request: add official HPU source for founding dean sentence

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I have a professional connection to the subject of this article, so I am requesting this change here rather than editing the article directly.

Please consider adding the following official High Point University citation to the existing sentence about Martin becoming founding dean of the new law school at High Point University. This is a narrow sourcing request for an existing factual statement already in the article.

Existing sentence:

In 2022, it was announced that he would be leaving Regent University to become the founding Dean of a new law school at High Point University.

Suggested citation to add after the existing source for that sentence:

<ref>{{cite web |no-tracking=true|title=HPU Welcomes Former N.C. Chief Justice as Founding Dean of Law School |url=https://www.highpoint.edu/blog/2022/06/hpu-welcomes-former-n-c-chief-justice-as-founding-dean-of-law-school/ |publisher=High Point University |date=June 7, 2022 |access-date=April 29, 2026}}</ref>

Reason: the High Point University announcement directly supports the existing statement that Martin became founding dean of the law school.

~2026-26153-46 (talk) 19:00, 29 April 2026 (UTC)

Done DiscoursesonLivvy (talk · contribs) 22:04, 16 May 2026 (UTC)


COI edit request: add citation for Brussels birth sentence in Education section

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Paid-contribution disclosure per WP:PAID and WP:COI: I am a paid consultant, and my client is the subject of this article, Mark Martin, who has retained me for online-presence work. I am making this disclosure with the request itself, and I am not editing the article directly. For transparency, the earlier sourcing request above (29 April 2026, answered 16 May 2026, submitted under temporary account ~2026-26153-46) was made as part of this same engagement.

This is a narrow sourcing request. The first sentence of the Education section has carried a citation-needed tag since August 2023. I am proposing a citation that directly supports it. No article text is added, removed, or changed. The only edit is replacing the maintenance tag with a reference.

Existing sentence (Education section, with the tag):

Martin was born in Brussels, where his father, who served in the [[United States Air Force]], was assigned to the U.S. Embassy.{{citation needed|date=August 2023}}

Proposed replacement (same sentence, tag replaced with a citation):

Martin was born in Brussels, where his father, who served in the [[United States Air Force]], was assigned to the U.S. Embassy.<ref>{{cite web |no-tracking=true|title=An Exclusive Interview With North Carolina Supreme Court Chief Justice Mark Martin |url=https://attorneyatlawmagazine.com/chief-justice-mark-martin |website=Attorney at Law Magazine |date=May 10, 2017 |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20221004091111/https://attorneyatlawmagazine.com/chief-justice-mark-martin |archive-date=October 4, 2022 |url-status=live |access-date=June 10, 2026}}</ref>

About the source: Attorney at Law Magazine is a legal trade publication, and the piece is a 2017 profile/interview of Martin. The supporting sentence appears in the magazine's own editorial introduction rather than in the subject's quoted answers: "Martin was born in Brussels, Belgium (his father served in the U.S. Air Force and was assigned to the U.S. Embassy)." This covers all three elements of the tagged sentence (Brussels birth, Air Force father, embassy assignment), and the birthplace matches the existing infobox. The detail is uncontroversial. If additional corroboration is wanted, the archived official North Carolina Supreme Court biography (archive link) independently confirms the Air Force detail, though not the Brussels birth, so it is not proposed as the citation.

HunterWilsonLWG (talk) 19:14, 10 June 2026 (UTC)

Reply 26-JUN-2026

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   Go ahead approved  

  • An impartial editor has reviewed the proposed edit(s) and asks the COI editor to go ahead and make the suggested changes.
  • Please ensure all added references are formatted according to whichever system is already in use with the article. (See WP:CITEVAR.)

Regards,  Spintendo  17:03, 26 June 2026 (UTC)

Implemented as approved on 2 July 2026 — the citation needed tag on the Brussels sentence has been replaced with the Attorney at Law Magazine citation exactly as proposed, matching the article's existing cite-web reference style per WP:CITEVAR. Thank you for the review. HunterWilsonLWG (talk) 20:57, 2 July 2026 (UTC)


COI edit request: add Honors and awards section

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Paid-contribution disclosure per WP:PAID: I am a paid consultant, and my client is the subject of this article (see the connected-contributor banner above; prior requests on this page, most recently implemented on 2 July 2026). As before, I am not editing the article directly and am requesting review here.

COI edit request: Superior Court appointment detail (Career section)

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Paid-contribution disclosure per WP:PAID: I am a paid consultant, and my client is the subject of this article (see the connected-contributor banner above). Requesting review of one sentence for the Career section.

Requested change: in the Career section, immediately after the sentence ending "...until his appointment in 1992 as Resident Superior Court Judge in Pitt County, North Carolina.", add:

Appointed at age 29, Martin was the youngest Superior Court judge in North Carolina since the colonial era.<ref>{{cite press release |no-tracking=true|title=Chief Justice Mark Martin to Become Dean of Regent University School of Law |publisher=North Carolina Judicial Branch |date=January 25, 2019 |url=https://www.nccourts.gov/news/tag/press-release/chief-justice-mark-martin-to-become-dean-of-regent-university-school-of-law |access-date=July 2, 2026 |quote=In 1992, at age 29, Martin became the youngest superior court judge since colonial days.}}</ref><ref>{{cite press release |no-tracking=true|title=Regent University Names Distinguished North Carolina Supreme Court Chief Justice Mark Martin as Dean of Law School Effective March 1, 2019 |publisher=Regent University |date=January 2019 |url=https://www.regent.edu/news/regent-university-names-distinguished-north-carolina-supreme-court-chief-justice-mark-martin-as-dean-of-law-school-effective-march-1-2019/ |access-date=July 2, 2026}}</ref>

Reason: the lead already notes the youngest-in-history distinctions for the state Supreme Court and Court of Appeals; the equivalent, well-documented distinction for his 1992 Superior Court appointment is absent. The primary citation is an official North Carolina Judicial Branch press release stating the fact verbatim; a Regent University release corroborates it ("the youngest superior court judge in the modern era"). If reviewers prefer this in the lead alongside the existing sentences, I defer on placement. HunterWilsonLWG (talk) 21:00, 2 July 2026 (UTC)

Reply 5-JUL-2026

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  Edit request declined  

  • The cited sources are two press releases, one from the courts and one from the school. While the courts are good sources on themselves, the courts main job is to administer law, not to act as historians. Same with the school, they are experts on themselves and their institution, but they are not experts on the courts nor are they historians (historians, if there were any, would all be working in teaching roles at the university, not in the press office of the university, where no doubt this press release was drafted).
  • Thus, this claim—which is, at its core, mere trivia—should ideally come from historians published in a peer reviewed journal.

Regards,  Spintendo  09:46, 5 July 2026 (UTC)


COI edit request: law school ABA provisional approval (Career section)

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Paid-contribution disclosure per WP:PAID: I am a paid consultant, and my client is the subject of this article (see the connected-contributor banner above). Requesting review of a short factual update in the Career section.

Requested change: after the existing sentence "In 2022, it was announced that he would be leaving Regent University to become the founding Dean of a new law school at High Point University." (and its citations), add:

The school, the Kenneth F. Kahn School of Law, received provisional approval from the [[American Bar Association]] in February 2026.<ref>{{cite news |no-tracking=true|last=Hill |first=Julianne |title=2 law schools get nod from ABA Legal Ed council |work=ABA Journal |date=March 17, 2026 |url=https://www.abajournal.com/news/article/high-point-northern-illinois-law-schools-get-nod-from-legal-ed-council |access-date=July 2, 2026}}</ref><ref>{{cite news |no-tracking=true|title=High Point Law earns ABA provisional approval |work=National Jurist |date=March 19, 2026 |url=https://nationaljurist.com/high-point-law-earns-aba-provisional-approval/ |access-date=July 2, 2026}}</ref>

Reason: a notable, dated milestone for the subject's current role, reported by independent legal press — ABA Journal confirms the accrediting council's February 27, 2026 approval, and National Jurist corroborates it. HunterWilsonLWG (talk) 21:00, 2 July 2026 (UTC)

Reply 5-JUL-2026

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  Edit request declined  

  • If that law school were independently notable, then perhaps this could be mentioned. If not, then this is essentially additional information on the subject's most recent work experience. (See WP:NOTCV.)

Regards,  Spintendo  09:56, 5 July 2026 (UTC)



Requested edits – Mark Scott article (titles, dates, updates)

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I have a conflict of interest as I work for Mark Scott. I am not editing the article directly and am requesting these changes in line with Wikipedia’s COI guidelines.

SandstoneNotes (talk) 16:07, 18 May 2026 (UTC)

Reply 16-JUN-2026

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  Unable to review  

  • Your edit request could not be reviewed because the provided references are not formatted correctly. The citation style predominantly used by the Mark Scott article is Citation Style 1 (CS1). The citation style used in the edit request consists of bare URL's.[a] Any requested edit of yours which may be implemented will need to resemble the current style already in use in the article – in this case, CS1. (See WP:CITEVAR.) In the extended section below titled Citation style, I have illustrated two examples: one showing how the edit request was submitted, and another showing how requests should be submitted in the future:
  • Kindly resubmit the edit request below at your earliest convenience, taking care to ensure that it makes use of CS1. If you have any questions about this formatting please don't hesitate to ask myself or another editor.

Regards,  Spintendo  07:23, 17 June 2026 (UTC)

References

  1. "WP:CITEVAR - Wikipedia:Citing sources". Wikipedia. 20 October 2018. Retrieved 22 October 2018. Guideline: It is normal practice to defer to the style used by the first major contributor or adopted by the consensus of editors already working on the page, unless a change in consensus has been achieved. If the article you are editing is already using a particular citation style, you should follow it.


Resubmitted edit request with CS1 citations

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What I think should be changed (with CS1 citations):

1. Lead sentence – title update from Principal → President

Replace: "Mark Walter Scott AO (born 9 October 1962) is an Australian and American public servant and academic administrator who serves as the Vice-Chancellor and Principal of the University of Sydney."

With: "Mark Walter Scott AO (born 9 October 1962) is an Australian and American public servant and academic administrator who serves as the Vice-Chancellor and President of the University of Sydney."

Citation: "Vice-Chancellor and President". University of Sydney. University of Sydney. Retrieved 21 June 2026.

---

2. NSW Department of Education role

Replace: "In June 2016, Scott was appointed Secretary of the New South Wales Department of Education."

With: "From 2016 to 2021, Scott served as Secretary of the New South Wales Department of Education."

Citation: "Heads of Department". NSW Department of Education. NSW Government. Retrieved 21 June 2026.

---

3. ABC tenure

Replace: "In 2010, he was appointed to a second five-year term as the ABC's managing director."

With: "From 2006 to 2016, he served as the ABC's managing director."

Citation: Simons, Margaret (3 May 2016). "In Conversation: Mark Scott on his decade in charge of the ABC". The Conversation. Retrieved 21 June 2026.

---

4. Personal life – spouse update

Replace: "Scott is married to Briony Scott, the principal of Wenona School, a private day and boarding school for girls."

With: "Scott is married to Briony Scott, who was the principal of Wenona School before being appointed Chief Executive Officer of Royal Far West."

Citations: "Royal Far West appoints new Chief Executive Officer". Royal Far West. Royal Far West. 2024. Retrieved 21 June 2026.

"Royal Far West appoints Dr Briony Scott CEO of rural child health". The Sector. The Sector. 2024. Retrieved 21 June 2026.

---

5. Teacher Education Expert Panel

Add to career section: "From 2022 to 2023, Scott chaired the Australian Government’s Teacher Education Expert Panel, which delivered its final report in July 2023."

Citation: "Strong Beginnings: Report of the Teacher Education Expert Panel". Australian Government Department of Education. Department of Education. July 2023. Retrieved 21 June 2026.

---

Why it should be changed: These edits correct or update factual information (titles, timelines, and roles) using reliable, verifiable sources. All citations now follow Citation Style 1 (CS1), consistent with the existing article, in accordance with WP:CITEVAR. SandstoneNotes (talk) 03:36, 22 June 2026 (UTC)


COI request - bio updates

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1. Addition of audiology

  • What I think should be changed: In the first sentence of the lead, replace “the British retail optometry chain” with “the British retail optometry and audiology chain”.
  • Why it should be changed: Audiology has been a significant part of Specsavers’ business since 2002.
  • References supporting the possible change: [1]


2. Children in business description

  • What I think should be changed: In the second paragraph of the intro, replace the existing sentence with: “Together with her husband, co-founder and chairman Doug Perkins, Dame Mary has three children, two of whom work for Specsavers; their son John has been chief executive of the company since 2015.”
  • Why it should be changed: The Times article identifies John Perkins as Specsavers’ chief executive since 2015 and confirms he is the son of Dame Mary and Doug Perkins.
  • References supporting the possible change: [2]


3. Sunday Times Rich List update

  • What I think should be changed: In the third para of the intro, replace “In spring 2015, her net worth was estimated to be £1.45 billion.” with “In The Sunday Times Rich List 2026, Mary and Doug Perkins and family were ranked 117th in the list of Britain's Wealthiest People, with their personal worth estimated at £1.409 billion. Dame Mary was previously reported to be Britain's first self-made female billionaire.”
  • Why it should be changed: The 2026 edition of the same Sunday Times list is the most recent and supersedes the 2015 figure. Preserves the existing self-made-female-billionaire descriptor.
  • References supporting the possible change: [3]


4. Sunday Times Tax List 2026 addition

  • What I think should be changed: In the fourth paragraph of the lead, replace “In February 2026, Mary was listed on the Sunday Times Tax list with an estimated £121.7 million.” with “In The Sunday Times Tax List 2026, Mary and her husband Doug Perkins were ranked tenth, having paid £121.7 million in taxes.”
  • Why it should be changed: The £121.7m figure is the joint Doug + Dame Mary entry, not an individual estimate; the source explicitly attributes it to them as a couple. Wording is also clearer that this is the Tax List (tax paid), not a Rich List estimate.
  • References supporting the possible change: [4]


5. Removal of unverifiable “continue to receive income” clause

  • What I think should be changed: In the Early life section, replace “This became a chain of optometrists around Bristol, which they sold for £2 million in 1980, and from which they continue to receive income.” with “This became a chain of optometrists around Bristol, which they sold for £2 million in 1980.”
  • Why it should be changed: The "continue to receive income" phrasing loosely paraphrases the 2005 Davidson interview, which describes the couple living off interest on investments funded by the Bristol-sale proceeds – not ongoing income from the chain itself. The clause is 21 years old and unverifiable for the present day.
  • References supporting the possible change: No new source required (existing citation already supports the £2m/1980 facts).


6. Co-founder correction

  • What I think should be changed: In the Specsavers section, replace “Her current title at Specsavers is ‘founder’.” with “Her current title at Specsavers is ‘co-founder’.”
  • Why it should be changed: Internal inconsistency – the lead of this same article already describes her as “co-founder of Specsavers”, as does the Specsavers article. Dame Mary is universally described as co-founder alongside her husband Doug.
  • References supporting the possible change: No new source required (consistent with this article’s existing lead and the Specsavers article).


7. 2023 family trust ownership note

  • What I think should be changed: At the end of the Specsavers section, after the existing paragraph about her current role and store visits, insert a new sentence: “In 2023, Dame Mary and Doug Perkins placed Specsavers into a family trust, stating that they did not want their children to sell the business to private equity.”
  • Why it should be changed: Materially affects future ownership of the business she co-founded; independently reported by The Times in two separate pieces.
  • References supporting the possible change: [5][6]


8. Addition of 2018 honorary doctorates

  • What I think should be changed: In the Awards and honours section, after the 2017 EY Lifetime Achievement Award paragraph, insert a new paragraph: “In 2018, Dame Mary was awarded an honorary Doctor of Laws by the University of Bristol and an honorary Doctor of Science by De Montfort University in Leicester.”
  • Why it should be changed: Fills a chronological gap (2017-2023) in the existing Awards and honours section and parallels the existing entries on her Cardiff and Plymouth honorary degrees.
  • References supporting the possible change: [7]


9. Addition of 2023 Great British Entrepreneur Awards Hall of Fame

  • What I think should be changed: At the end of the Awards and honours section, insert a new paragraph: “In 2023, Dame Mary was inducted into the Great British Entrepreneur Awards Hall of Fame in recognition of her continued support for new business leaders.”
  • Why it should be changed: Most recent award in her honours record.
  • References supporting the possible change: [8]

Crzyhorse3000 (talk) 11:27, 29 May 2026 (UTC)


Requested update to lead and sourcing

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I am the subject of this article and am requesting changes through the talk page in line with Wikipedia's conflict-of-interest guidance.

I request these changes:

1. Update the lead to reflect my current role at Analog Devices.

2. Replace weak/self-published references where stronger independent sources exist.

3. Restructure the article into a more standard biography format:

* Early life and education

* Academic and research career

* Neurala

* Analog Devices

* Selected honors

Suggested replacement lead:

'''Massimiliano Versace''' (born 21 December 1972) is an Italian-American artificial intelligence researcher and entrepreneur. He co-founded Neurala, a Boston-based artificial intelligence software company, and later became Vice President of Emergent AI at Analog Devices. He previously directed Boston University's Neuromorphics Laboratory.

Reason for request:

The current article appears to rely in part on weak or self-published sourcing and does not reflect my current role.

~~~~ Maxversace72 (talk) 11:55, 17 April 2026 (UTC)

Here are sources supporting the requested update:
  • Analog Devices identifies me as "Max Versace, Vice President of Emergent AI": https://www.analog.com/en/careers/ai-careers.html
  • Boston University Bostonia identifies me as director of BU's Neuromorphics Laboratory: https://www.bu.edu/bostonia/summer13/versace/
  • NASA describes Neurala's manufacturing/inspection work as derived from Mars-rover-related AI research: https://www.nasa.gov/technology/tech-transfer-spinoffs/from-mars-rovers-to-factory-assembly-lines/
If helpful, I can propose a more fully sourced revised lead and body outline based on these references.
~~~~ Maxversace72 (talk) 11:57, 17 April 2026 (UTC)
Thank you for your contributions. The lead looks good at a glance. If you'd be willing to propose a fully sourced and revised lead, as well as specific changes to the body, that would be very helpful. Cheers, DiscoursesonLivvy (talk · contribs) 01:46, 18 April 2026 (UTC)
Thanks you! Below is a fully sourced proposal focused on the lead and a few concrete body changes.
Proposed revised lead:
Massimiliano Versace is an Italian-American artificial intelligence researcher and entrepreneur. He co-founded Neurala and is Vice President of Emergent AI at Analog Devices. He previously directed Boston University's Neuromorphics Lab.[1][2][3]
Proposed body changes:
  • In the Career section, replace the opening paragraph with:
Versace co-founded Neurala in 2006. A 2017 TechCrunch article about the company's $14 million Series A described Neurala's focus on edge machine learning, and a 2024 NASA Spinoff article described the company's visual-inspection software as having evolved from earlier NASA-funded rover work.[4][5]
  • Also in Career (or in a short new subsection), add:
Analog Devices identifies Versace as Vice President of Emergent AI.[6]
  • For the Boston University material, I suggest keeping only the most directly sourced claim:
A 2013 Bostonia profile identified Versace as director of Boston University's Neuromorphics Lab and described the lab's NASA-linked autonomous robotics work.[7]
Source cleanup request:
  • Replace current ref 8 (Google News mirror) with the TechCrunch citation above.
  • Remove or replace refs 9-12 (YouTube/personal-site sourcing) where they are being used for biographical claims, since stronger sources now exist.
  • I have intentionally not proposed changes to the unsourced awards/early-life material in this request, to keep the request narrow and easier to review.
Thank you again.
~~~~ Maxversace72 (talk) 19:29, 28 April 2026 (UTC)


Requested edit

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The following changes are requested to update the informational accuracy of the Controversies section.

In October 2015, McGraw-Hill Education was accused of whitewashing history after it had published a geography textbook with a caption referring to American slaves as "workers."[48] The company quickly apologized[8], promised to update the digital version of the materials, and offered schools replacement texts at no charge[9].

192.243.80.180 (talk) 17:09, 10 November 2015 (UTC)

 Done Someone has impelmented this edit. ---- Patar knight - chat/contributions 05:35, 18 December 2015 (UTC)

References

  1. Kennedy, Patrick L. (May 29, 2013). "The Robot as Decider". Bostonia. Retrieved 2026-04-28.
  2. Vanian, Jonathan (January 17, 2017). "Versace Family Member Wants To Succeed In Artificial Intelligence, Not Fashion". Fortune. Retrieved 2026-04-28.
  3. "Artificial Intelligence Careers at Analog Devices". Analog Devices. Retrieved 2026-04-28.
  4. Mannes, John (January 17, 2017). "Neurala closes $14M Series A to bring machine learning to the edge". TechCrunch. Retrieved 2026-04-28.
  5. Carroll, Rebecca (November 1, 2024). "From Mars Rovers to Factory Assembly Lines". NASA Spinoff. Retrieved 2026-04-28.
  6. "Artificial Intelligence Careers at Analog Devices". Analog Devices. Retrieved 2026-04-28.
  7. Kennedy, Patrick L. (May 29, 2013). "The Robot as Decider". Bostonia. Retrieved 2026-04-28.
  8. https://www.facebook.com/McGrawHillEducation/posts/1056963857671901
  9. http://www.nytimes.com/2015/10/06/us/publisher-promises-revisions-after-textbook-refers-to-african-slaves-as-workers.html


COI edit request

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  • Specific text to be added or removed:

- Add to overview: "McGraw Hill completed its initial public offering on July 24, 2025, and began trading on the New York Stock Exchange under the ticker symbol MH." - Update infobox fields to: company type -- Public; Traded as - NYSE: MH. - Update or remove the "Owner: Platinum Equity" field to reflect the company's current public ownership structure.

Ben.roselieb (talk) 19:23, 3 June 2026 (UTC)


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Disclosure: I have a conflict of interest. I added the sourced "Diving" section to this article, and I operate DiveCodex (divecodex.com), a dive-site reference website. Per WP:COI I am not adding my own site to the article myself.

Request: please add the following to the External links section, if editors judge it a useful resource

If it is judged unsuitable, that is fine. Thank you. JouniKuisma (talk) 17:28, 24 June 2026 (UTC)


Article is underdeveloped and contains inaccuracies

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This article is significantly underdeveloped for a biography of a living person at this level of notability. It has no section structure, no detailed infobox, omits the subject’s entire early life, education, major board positions, charitable work, published books, and awards. Abundant reliable, independent sources exist - including a major profile in The Times, Reuters reports carried by CNBC and the Financial Post, Computer Weekly, Information Age profiles, Bloomberg appearances, and official UK Government (GOV.UK) and Porsche AG corporate records - but the article reflects almost none of this.

Below I provide specific proposed text for each section of the article, ready for review and implementation. The proposed text cites Wikipedia’s policies on Biographies of Living Persons (WP:BLP), Verifiability (WP:V), Neutral Point of View (WP:NPOV).

MichaelPWhite (talk) 17:44, 30 March 2026 (UTC)

Hello, and thanks to the reviewer who picks this up. I have a conflict of interest (declared on my user page) and am requesting the changes below rather than editing directly. Each citation is formatted in Citation Style 1 to match the article, and each <ref>...</ref> is placed inline at the exact point in the text it supports, per WP:CITEVAR and WP:INTEGRITY. ~~~~
----
=== 1. ADD new section: Early life and education ===
Rationale: the article currently contains no biographical background. Per WP:MOSBIO, a BLP of this type would normally open with an "Early life and education" section.
Proposed wikitext:
== Early life and education ==
Melissa Di Donato was born in New York City in 1972 and grew up in the Bronx.[1][2] She studied Russian Language and Literature and Political Science at Manhattanville College, graduating with a BA in 1994, and in 1996 graduated from American University in Washington, D.C., with two master's degrees in Russian Language and Literature and International Business.[3] She speaks several languages, including English, Italian, and Russian.[4]
----
=== 2. REPLACE existing pre-SUSE career text ===
Rationale: the article currently states she was "the chief revenue officer of SAP's cloud division." Independent sources confirm she held both the Chief Revenue Officer and Chief Operating Officer titles at SAP. Information Age reported that prior to SUSE she was chief operating officer and chief revenue officer at SAP. The article also omits her time at PwC. Per WP:V, the text should reflect what the sources say.
Proposed wikitext (to replace the existing pre-SUSE career text):
== Career ==
=== Early career ===
Di Donato began her career as a technologist and SAP R/3 developer, becoming one of the few female software developers working on the platform at that time.[5] Between 1998 and 2008 she held roles at PricewaterhouseCoopers (PwC), Oracle and IBM.[6]
In 2010, she joined Salesforce, becoming Area Vice President and its most senior female executive outside the United States.[7] She subsequently became Chief Revenue Officer and Chief Operating Officer of SAP for its digital core (ERP) division.[8]
----
=== 3. ADD new section: Board and advisory positions ===
Rationale: several board seats at publicly traded companies and UK government bodies are currently omitted.
Proposed wikitext:
== Board and advisory positions ==
Di Donato is a member of the supervisory board of Porsche AG, appointed in 2022 in connection with Porsche's initial public offering.[9] She is also a non-executive director at J.P. Morgan Europe.[10]
In April 2023, she was appointed a non-executive director of the newly created Department for Science, Innovation and Technology (DSIT).[11] She also serves on the SME Digital Adoption Taskforce at the Department for Business and Trade.[12]
In September 2023, Di Donato was appointed chair and CEO of Kyriba.[13]
----
=== 4. ADD new section: Philanthropy and published works ===
Rationale: the GOV.UK biography confirms she founded the Inner Wings Charitable Foundation and is the author of three children's books. Operational details about the foundation are cited to the foundation's own website, acceptable for non-contentious factual information about the organisation itself per WP:ABOUTSELF.
Proposed wikitext:
== Philanthropy and published works ==
Di Donato co-founded the Inner Wings Charitable Foundation, a UK-registered charity (number 1192877).[14][15] The foundation delivers free confidence-building programmes to primary school children, with a focus on girls, working with partner schools across the UK.[16]
Di Donato is the author of three children's books, with proceeds reinvested into Inner Wings.[17]
----
=== 5. ADD infobox ===
Rationale: the article has no infobox. A standard {{Infobox person}} is proposed below; all values are supported by the sources used in the body above.
Proposed wikitext (to add at the top of the article):
Melissa Di Donato
Born1972 (age 5354)
New York City, U.S.
Alma materManhattanville College
American University
OccupationBusiness executive
TitleChair and CEO of Kyriba
----

References

  1. "Melissa Di Donato Roos – Resume" (PDF). Porsche AG Investor Relations. Retrieved 12 June 2026.
  2. Wakefield, Jane (29 September 2023). "Melissa Di Donato: Chair & CEO of Kyriba". Boardwave. Retrieved 12 June 2026.
  3. "Melissa Di Donato Roos – Resume" (PDF). Porsche AG Investor Relations. Retrieved 12 June 2026.
  4. Wakefield, Jane (29 September 2023). "Melissa Di Donato: Chair & CEO of Kyriba". Boardwave. Retrieved 12 June 2026.
  5. Esherwood, Paul (2 March 2020). "Melissa Di Donato – how far have we really come?". ERP Today. Retrieved 12 June 2026.
  6. Wakefield, Jane (29 September 2023). "Melissa Di Donato: Chair & CEO of Kyriba". Boardwave. Retrieved 12 June 2026.
  7. Wakefield, Jane (29 September 2023). "Melissa Di Donato: Chair & CEO of Kyriba". Boardwave. Retrieved 12 June 2026.
  8. Ismail, Nick (22 July 2019). "Former SAP COO, Melissa Di Donato, appointed CEO of SUSE". Information Age. Retrieved 12 June 2026.
  9. "Porsche AG reorganises its supervisory board". Porsche Newsroom. 2022. Retrieved 12 June 2026.
  10. "Melissa Di Donato". Management Today. 2025. Retrieved 12 June 2026.
  11. "The stars align for science and tech as non-execs are appointed to the DSIT start-up board". GOV.UK. April 2023. Retrieved 12 June 2026.
  12. "Melissa Di Donato". GOV.UK. Retrieved 12 June 2026.
  13. Wakefield, Jane (29 September 2023). "Melissa Di Donato: Chair & CEO of Kyriba". Boardwave. Retrieved 12 June 2026.
  14. "Melissa Di Donato". GOV.UK. Retrieved 12 June 2026.
  15. "About Us". Inner Wings. Retrieved 12 June 2026.
  16. "About Us". Inner Wings. Retrieved 12 June 2026.
  17. "Melissa Di Donato". GOV.UK. Retrieved 12 June 2026.
MichaelPWhite (talk) 16:13, 12 June 2026 (UTC)

Reply 9-JUN-2026

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  Unable to review  
Your edit request could not be reviewed because the request is not formatted correctly.

  1. The citation style predominantly used by the Melissa Di Donato article appears to be Citation Style 1. The citation style used in the edit request consists of bare URL's.[b] Any requested edit of yours which may be implemented will need to resemble the current style already in use in the article – in this case, CS1. (See WP:CITEVAR.)
  2. Citation ref tags have not been placed within the requested text indicating which portions of the text the source is referencing. (See WP:INTEGRITY.)

In the collapsed section below titled Request edit examples, I have illustrated two: The first shows how the edit request was submitted; the second shows how requests should be submitted in the future.

Kindly rewrite your edit request so that it aligns more with the second example shown in the collapsed section above, and feel free to re-submit that edit request at your earliest convenience. If you have any questions about this formatting please don't hesitate to ask myself or another editor. Regards,  Spintendo  23:32, 8 June 2026 (UTC)

Thank you for your review. We will re-submit with now in the CS1 style. MichaelPWhite (talk) 16:07, 12 June 2026 (UTC)

Notes

  1. The use of bare URLs as references is a style which is acceptable for use in Wikipedia. However, general practice dictates that the style already in use for an article be the one that is subsequently used for all future additions unless changed by editorial consensus.[1]
  2. The use of bare URLs as references is a style which is acceptable for use in Wikipedia. However, general practice dictates that the style already in use for an article be the one that is subsequently used for all future additions unless changed by editorial consensus.


Suggestion to update management and financials

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Dear all,

I would like to suggest to update the key people section as well as the financials in the infobox. Please note that I have a financial conflict of interest as I am an employee of Merck Group.

I am looking forward to feedback from independent editors. Greatly appreciate everybody’s time for this! Best, Heinrich-Emanuel (talk) 08:20, 6 May 2026 (UTC)

 Done. Infobox updates are not critical. Grimes2 17:39, 6 May 2026 (UTC)
@Grimes2: I've closed the request. Feel free to reopen it if you want, but please remember to close requests (see the template's docs) when you're done, it is especially important when the queue is so long. Seercat3160 (talk) 07:49, 10 May 2026 (UTC)


Suggestion for update

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Dear all,

I would like to suggest to update one information in the article related to the brand use of Merck inside and outside the U.S. and Canada. Please note that I have a financial conflict of interest as I am an employee of Merck Group.

I am looking forward to feedback from independent editors. Please also let me know if you have any questions. Greatly appreciate everybody’s time for this! Best, Heinrich-Emanuel (talk) 07:22, 22 May 2026 (UTC)


Proposed edits — BLP concerns, NPOV violations, and missing peer-reviewed research

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I am disclosing a conflict of interest per WP:COI and requesting that uninvolved editors review and, if appropriate, implement the following proposed changes to this biography of a living person.

Proposed Edit 1: Opening line Current text: "best known as the founder of uBeam, a company that claimed to develop wireless charging technology using ultrasound but did not succeed in producing a commercial product."

Proposed text: "best known as the inventor of ultrasonic wireless power transmission."

Rationale:

The current opening has multiple problems under WP:BLP, WP:NPOV, and WP:LABEL: (a) "Claimed to develop" is factually inaccurate and pejorative. The subject is the named inventor on 25 granted U.S. patents for ultrasonic wireless power transmission (source: Google Patents, J. Craig Venter Institute board biography). The U.S. Patent and Trademark Office does not grant patents for technology that was merely "claimed." This phrasing implies the technology was fictitious, which no reliable source supports. Per WP:PEACOCK and WP:LABEL, Wikipedia should not use loaded characterizations where neutral language exists.

(b) Defining a living person primarily by a defunct company is inappropriate under WP:BLP. The company in question changed its name to SonicEnergy and is reported to have ceased operations in 2024. The subject left the company in 2018 — nearly eight years ago — and has since co-founded Elemind Technologies, which has published peer-reviewed clinical research in Nature Portfolio journals and shipped a commercial product. Anchoring the biography's opening sentence to a company that no longer exists under its original name, rather than to the subject's actual body of work as an inventor, does not serve the reader and raises BLP concerns about defining a living person by a negative characterization of a former employer.

(c) "Did not succeed in producing a commercial product" in the opening line is editorializing. The article body already covers the company's history, criticism, and commercial outcome in appropriate detail. Frontloading the very first sentence with a failure characterization, before any mention of the subject's patents, current work, or recognition, violates WP:NPOV and WP:DUE for a biography of a living person. By comparison, the opening lines of biographies of other founders whose companies did not reach commercial success (e.g., many deep-tech and biotech founders) typically describe the subject's field of work, not the commercial outcome of a single venture.

The proposed language — "best known as the inventor of ultrasonic wireless power transmission" — is verifiable (25 granted patents, PennVention competition win sourced in the article itself, coverage in Fortune, NPR, USA Today, and the New York Times describing the subject as the inventor of the technology). The full history of uBeam, including criticism and commercial outcome, remains in the article body where it can be presented with appropriate context and sourcing.

Sources: US9094111B2 — Receiver transducer for wireless power transfer (granted patent, inventor: Meredith Perry) US20120299540A1 — Sender communications for wireless power transfer (inventor: Meredith Perry) J. Craig Venter Institute biography: "She has been awarded 25 patents with an additional five pending." Fortune (2014): "Meet the 25-year-old inventor working on wireless charging technology" SonicEnergy Wikipedia article: documents the company's name change and reported closure in 2024

Proposed Edit 2: Elemind section — update with peer-reviewed clinical trial and correct terminology

Current text: On February 6, 2024, Elemind emerged from stealth mode, with Perry saying that its wearable device could "stop tremor for people with essential tremors" and "induce sleep, faster than leading sleep drugs", as well as assist in memory formation and pain management, although no device image was released at that time.

Proposed text: On February 6, 2024, Elemind emerged from stealth mode, with Perry saying that its wearable device could "suppress tremor for people with essential tremors" and "induce sleep, faster than leading sleep drugs", as well as assist in memory formation and pain management. In June 2024, the company published a randomized controlled clinical trial in Scientific Reports (Nature Portfolio), reporting that acoustic stimulation delivered by its wearable headband significantly reduced sleep onset latency in adults with insomnia (p=0.0019), with 76% of participants experiencing improvement relative to a sham control. Third-party coverage of the study appeared in MIT News. Elemind's headband is now commercially available.

Rationale: (a) "Stop tremor" → "suppress tremor" corrects the quoted language to match published scientific literature. The subject's published research and public statements use "suppress," not "stop." (b) The clinical trial is a WP:MEDRS-compliant source. It is a randomized controlled trial published in a peer-reviewed journal (Scientific Reports, Nature Portfolio), indexed in PubMed (PMID: 38844793), and registered on ClinicalTrials.gov (NCT05743114). Third-party coverage from MIT News satisfies WP:SECONDARY. (c) "Although no device image was released at that time" is outdated trivial detail. The device has since shipped commercially and images are widely available. This clause adds no encyclopedic value and should be removed per WP:TRIVIA.

Sources: Bressler S, Neely R, Yost RM, Wang D. "A randomized controlled trial of alpha phase-locked auditory stimulation to treat symptoms of sleep onset insomnia." Scientific Reports 14 (2024). DOI: 10.1038/s41598-024-63385-1 MIT News / MedicalXpress: "Headband helps people fall asleep by aligning audio signals with brainwaves" ClinicalTrials.gov NCT05743114

I welcome feedback from uninvolved editors on both proposals. Berlinwhalel1989 (talk) 02:51, 31 March 2026 (UTC)


  • What I think should be changed:This article has been subject to ongoing edit wars and I am requesting page protection to preserve the current version against further disruptive, non-neutral edits. The prior version of this article contains multiple WP:BLP and WP:NPOV violations that I want to flag for administrators:

1. Non-neutral lead sentence: The opening reads: "best known as the founder of uBeam, a company that claimed to develop wireless charging technology using ultrasound but did not succeed in producing a commercial product." The word "claimed" implies dishonesty or deception rather than neutrally describing the company's work. Placing an editorial negative conclusion ("did not succeed") in the very first sentence of a biography of a living person violates WP:BLP, which requires that BLPs be "written conservatively" and "in a dispassionate tone, avoiding both understatement and overstatement." Leading with a negative conclusion in the opening sentence is inconsistent with this standard and gives WP:UNDUE weight to one aspect of the subject's career. 2. Editorializing the TEDx talk: The article states Perry "argued that engineers are inherently linear thinkers," followed immediately by "Commentators later contrasted these claims with the doubts raised by experts." The word "argued" is editorial rather than neutral (compare: "discussed," "described," or "said"). Characterizing her talk as making "claims" that are then debunked in the next sentence creates a non-neutral framing that is inconsistent with WP:NPOV. 3. Outdated and misleading editorial aside on Elemind: The Elemind section ends with "although no device image was released at that time." This editorial aside was clearly written to cast doubt on whether the product exists. As of 2024–2025, Elemind is a commercially shipping consumer product available for purchase, which makes this aside not only non-neutral but factually misleading to current readers. 4. Structural imbalance: The "Recognition and reception" section re-states criticism of uBeam that was already covered in the uBeam section, effectively doubling the negative framing. Meanwhile, the article contains no mention of Perry's peer-reviewed publications in Nature portfolio journals, her 8 granted patents (4 jointly with MIT), Elemind's £6.3M MRC research grant with Imperial College London for Alzheimer's and sleep research, her co-founding of Elemind with MIT and Imperial College neuroscientists including Ed Boyden, or her board membership at the J. Craig Venter Institute. This structural imbalance — heavy on criticism, light on verifiable accomplishments — violates WP:NPOV and WP:BLP. 5. Pattern of edit warring: This article has been subject to recurring edit wars over an extended period. I am requesting semi-protection or full protection to prevent further disruptive editing on this BLP article.

Why it should be changed: WP:BLP requires that biographies of living persons be "written conservatively and with regard for the subject's privacy" and that "contentious material about living persons that is unsourced or poorly sourced should be removed immediately." The prior version of this article violates these principles through editorialized language ("claimed," "argued," "did not succeed" in the lead), outdated information presented to cast doubt (the "no device image" aside), and structural imbalance that weights criticism far above verifiable accomplishments. The ongoing edit warring on this article further warrants page protection under WP:EDITWAR and WP:PP. References supporting the possible change (format using the "cite" button):

    • Perry, M. et al. — Peer-reviewed publications in Nature portfolio journals (verifiable via PubMed and Google Scholar under "Elemind" and "closed-loop acoustic neuromodulation")
    • USPTO records — 8 granted patents, 4 jointly with MIT (searchable by inventor name "Meredith Perry")
    • UKRI Gateway to Research — 6.3M MRC grant with Imperial College London, "Closed-loop auditory stimulation for sleep and dementia"
    • Elemind Technologies commercial product — available at elemindtech.com, commercially shipping consumer product as of 2024
    • J. Craig Venter Institute Board of Trustees — https://www.jcvi.org/about/meredith-perry
    • Elemind co-founders include Ed Boyden (MIT), Nir Grossman (Imperial College London), David Wang (MIT PhD), Heather Read (UConn) — verifiable via https://elemindtech.com/pages/about-us
    • Forbes "30 Under 30," Fortune "Most Powerful Women," Vanity Fair "The New Establishment," Fast Company "Most Creative People," Elle "Genius Award" — all previously cited in the article itself

Berlinwhalel1989 (talk) 17:05, 26 April 2026 (UTC)

References


Proposed expansion of biography with additional sources

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I would like to propose a substantially expanded version of this article. The full proposed text is in my sandbox at User:Thjortel/Merrelyn Emery draft for review. Summary of the changes:

Added

  • {{Infobox scientist}} populated only with verifiable facts.
  • New Early life and education section, including the subject's birthplace (Broken Hill, NSW), childhood at Menindee on the Darling River, and the full sequence of degrees (1960 BA Psychology UNE, 1964 BA Hons I Psychology UNE, 1986 PhD Marketing UNSW). Sourced primarily to de Guerre & Deering (2016), supplemented by the subject's CV per WP:BLPSELFPUB for uncontroversial biographical facts.
  • New Career section with the full ANU Centre for Continuing Education chronology (tutor and research assistant 1970–76, lecturer 1976–97), preceded by earlier teaching and demonstrator positions.
  • Brief Personal life section describing the partnership and marriage with Fred Emery, sourced to Bawden's Australian Dictionary of Biography entry on Fred Emery.
  • The 2014 W. Ross Ashby Memorial Lecture at EMCSR (Vienna), sourced to the conference organiser.
  • Four additional published books with full bibliographic data: A Choice of Futures (Martinus Nijhoff, 1976), The Search Conference with R. E. Purser (Jossey-Bass, 1996), Educational Futures edited with O. N. Baburoğlu (Sabanci University Press, 2000), and Future of Schools (Rowman & Littlefield Education, 2006).

Corrected

  • Doctoral field: the current article does not explicitly name the field, but the subject's own CV gives the formal degree as PhD in Marketing (UNSW, 1986); the topic of the dissertation — neurophysiological effects of television viewing — is described in de Guerre & Deering (2016).
  • The 1960 BA degree was missing from the previous version.

Removed / trimmed

  • Two paragraphs paraphrasing the subject's own framing of OST, which were sourced largely to the subject's own website and to a podcast interview. Per WP:BLPSPS and WP:NPOV, these are not appropriate sources for substantive biographical material. Replaced with a shorter, neutrally phrased Research section sourced to third-party academic literature (de Guerre & Deering 2016; Babüroğlu 1992).
  • The direct quotation "innately social animals…" sourced to a podcast.

Sources introduced

  • de Guerre, D. W. & Deering, P. (2016). A Practical, Contextual Social Science to Engage the World — Merrelyn Emery and Open Systems Theory. (Third-party academic chapter; primary biographical source for the subject in the published literature.)
  • Bawden, R. Frederick Edmund (Fred) EmeryAustralian Dictionary of Biography. (Peer-reviewed.)
  • Babüroğlu, O. N. (1992). "Tracking the development of the Emery–Trist Systems Paradigm." Systems Practice 5(3): 263–290. doi:10.1007/BF01059830
  • Emery, M. (1999). Searching: The theory and practice of making cultural change. Amsterdam: John Benjamins. (For her own published work.)
  • Emery, M. (CV, hosted by Amerin Pty Ltd) — used only for uncontroversial biographical facts (birth date, education, employment dates) per WP:BLPSELFPUB exception 1. Not used to source any contestable claim.

Self-published items retained

  • Did 9/11 change the world? (2021) and An Open Systems Science (2026) are listed in Selected publications with the self-published status flagged. The 2026 work is supported by an independent third-party mention at the Systems Community of Inquiry. If reviewers consider these unsuitable under WP:NBOOK, they could reasonably be moved to External links.

Conflict of interest disclosure I have a personal connection to the subject through professional correspondence and am therefore proposing changes here rather than editing the article directly, in line with WP:COI. I would appreciate review by an independent editor.

I am happy to break this into smaller individual proposals if a single bundled review is impractical.

Trond Hjorteland (talk) 12:32, 27 April 2026 (UTC)


Typo in a graphic

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Themetcollection.svg

The file Themetcollection.svg has a legend at the bottom with dates, but one is in AC--I'm assuming this is meant to be BC. As this is off-wiki and in an area that I'm not familiar with (again, I'm only assuming it's a typo given the rest of the legend), should this image be changed? The media has an off-wiki source so I'm not sure of the procedure here. Departure– (talk) 16:01, 2 December 2025 (UTC)

Or are they trying "After Christ" as more PC than "Year of the Lord" in Latin? Johnbod (talk) 03:11, 3 December 2025 (UTC)


edit


Not done: your request appears to have been generated by a large language model. Day Creature (talk) 18:13, 6 July 2026 (UTC)
NOT SO. I wrote the text to be added. I don't know the protocol for suggesting an edit to a page about myself, so, from an abundance of caution, I did ask a LLM to help me format it into something that meets Wikipedia standards, and especially the difficulty of formatting for WikiMedia. MichaelFriendly (talk) 20:55, 6 July 2026 (UTC)
Just to be clear: What I'm proposing/requesting is a simple addition to my work section, after the sentence about my shift to history of dataviz. Something like:
Friendly maintains Milestones in the History of Data Visualization and Thematic Cartography, an online catalog and timeline documenting developments in statistical graphics, thematic cartography, and data visualization.[1]
And the external link:
Visualization and Thematic Cartography] MichaelFriendly (talk) 09:57, 7 July 2026 (UTC)
Regardless of whether you originally composed some of the text, AI-generated talk page posts and edit requests are not allowed per WP:AITALK. You are welcome to create a new edit request without the use of any AI assistance, but if you want the article to mention this online catalog, you'll need to find an independent reliable source that discusses it. Day Creature (talk) 18:30, 7 July 2026 (UTC)
OK, your point is well taken. Let me try again.
The text I would like added remains the same:
Friendly maintains Milestones in the History of Data Visualization and Thematic Cartography, an online catalog and timeline documenting developments in statistical graphics, thematic cartography, and data visualization.
With the same external link to the site:
History of Data Visualization and Thematic Cartography
Here are two sources to cite for this-- an independent interview and a book chapter I wrote about the process of developing this. I'm not well-versed in Wikimedia formatting. I hope I got this right
Bátorfy, Attila (2025-12-04). "Not just pretty pictures: interview with Michael Friendly". Attila Bátorfy's Cabinet of Infographic Curiosities. Substack. Retrieved 2026-07-08.
Friendly, Michael (2005). "Milestones in the History of Data Visualization: A Case Study in Statistical Historiography". In Weihs, C.; Gaul, W. (eds.). Classification: The Ubiquitous Challenge (PDF). New York: Springer. pp. 34–52. MichaelFriendly (talk) 11:01, 8 July 2026 (UTC)
The {{request edit}} template is for requesting changes to semi-protected pages. For conflict of interest requests, please use {{Edit COI}} instead.. I've updated the tempalte for you. meamemg (talk) 13:55, 8 July 2026 (UTC)
I thought that, because I was suggesting an edit to an article about myself, I was required to do so as an Edit Request. If this is not the case, can I just edit the page myself? I'm trying to do the right thing here. MichaelFriendly (talk) 08:25, 9 July 2026 (UTC)


Edit request

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Add “Companies Founded” section

Updated the formatting, thank you!
Wikidelrey (talk) 02:54, 27 June 2019 (UTC)

Reply 25-JUN-2019

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  Unable to review  
Your edit request could not be reviewed because the request is not formatted correctly.

  1. The citation style predominantly used by the Michael Jones article appears to utilize ref tags. The citation style used in the edit request consists of bare URL's.[a] Any requested edit of yours which may be implemented will need to resemble the current style already in use in the article – in this case, the use of ref tags.
  2. These ref tags have not been placed within the requested text indicating which portions of the text the source is referencing. (See WP:INTEGRITY.)

In the collapsed section below titled Request edit examples, I have illustrated two: The first shows how the edit request was submitted; the second shows how requests should be submitted in the future.

Kindly rewrite your edit request so that it aligns more with the second example shown in the collapsed section above, and feel free to re-submit that edit request at your earliest convenience. If you have any questions about this formatting please don't hesitate to ask myself or another editor. Regards,  Spintendo  18:44, 25 June 2019 (UTC)

Notes

  1. The use of bare URLs as references is a style which is acceptable for use in Wikipedia. However, general practice dictates that the style already in use for an article be the one that is subsequently used for all future additions unless changed by editorial consensus.

27-JUN-2019

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The larger issues here are the use of Companies founded when not all of the information under Companies founded are actually companies that the subject founded. A large portion of them are ones where he effected an advisory role, a phrase which itself is non-descriptive. Better context should be provided as to what the subject did in each instance, and how their role was pivotal to these companies being both founded and "advised" by the subject. Without that information, this is simply a recounting of the subject's work history, which would fall under WP:NOTRESUME. Regards,  Spintendo  06:02, 27 June 2019 (UTC)


Edit requests

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Hello! A few edit requests below, if possible:

Thank you!
Wikidelrey (talk) 03:42, 22 November 2019 (UTC)

Reply 22-NOV-2019

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  Clarification requested  

  • Thank you for providing clarification, it is much appreciated.
  • Unfortunately however, although the added clarifications state developments which occurred within each respective organization during the time the subject worked there, those clarifications do not state specifically what it was about the subject's role in those organizations which merits the information being placed in this article. Please elaborate by stating how and in what way their role in those organizations either led to those developments or enabled those developments to take place.
  • Additionally, the claim regading Myspace could not be added to the article because a specific timeframe was not described in the suggested prose.
  • Kindly open a new edit request at your earliest convenience when ready to proceed with the requested clarifications. Thank you!

Regards,  Spintendo  17:09, 22 November 2019 (UTC)


Edit request

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Hi there, is it possible to make a couple of edits?

  1. Add Liquid Death to this sentence in the Business Career --> Science Inc. section? Other startups that have come from Science include Liquid Death, DogVacay, Hello Society, HomeHero, FameBit, Delicious, Playhaven, Kyoku, and Quarterly.[1][2][3]
  2. Remove the maintenance template about bare URLs because I think the bare URLs have been removed?

Thank you so much!

Wikidelrey (talk) 06:18, 11 October 2022 (UTC) Wikidelrey (talk) 06:18, 11 October 2022 (UTC)

 Done added a citation for the Liquid Death inclusion. Thanks, Ptrnext (talk) 01:23, 15 October 2022 (UTC)


Edit request

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Hi there, is it possible to change the 4th sentence in the Science Inc. section to this?

Other startups that have come from Science include Liquid Death, where Jones sits on the board; DogVacay (acquired by Rover); HelloSociety (acquired by The New York Times); HomeHero; FameBit (acquired by Google and rebranded as YouTube BrandConnect); Delicious; Playhaven (acquired by RockYou); Kyoku (acquired by TheFeed); and Quarterly. [17][18][19][20][21] [4] [5] [6] [7] [8] [9]

Thank you!
Wikidelrey (talk) 03:10, 6 April 2023 (UTC)

Go ahead: I have reviewed these proposed changes and suggest that you go ahead and make the proposed changes to the page. Actualcpscm (talk) 10:43, 10 April 2023 (UTC)
Thank you so much, making the updates now!
Wikidelrey (talk) 18:19, 10 April 2023 (UTC)


Proposed change

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Is it possible to make the update below? Thank you!

  • Specific text to be added or removed: Change 3rd sentence to:

Jones was named one of Los Angeles's 500 most influential people by the Los Angeles Business Journal in 2014, 2017 and 2020 - 2024.[10][11][12][13][14]

  • Reason for the change: Updating for accuracy and to reflect all the years he was included.
  • References supporting change: See sources above.

Wikidelrey (talk) 05:03, 25 July 2024 (UTC)

@Actualcpscm @Ptrnext @Spintendo Hi all, just seeing if you might have any thoughts here, since you've graciously reviewed previous edit requests? Thank you, appreciate your time!
Wikidelrey (talk) 00:11, 9 August 2024 (UTC)
This award seems rather WP:UNDUE for one of two sentences in the lead. I have removed it altogether as I don't see an obvious place in the body for it to go, please feel free to suggest a wording/location in a followup request. Rusalkii (talk) 08:02, 14 August 2024 (UTC)
Gotcha! Would it be ok to add this to the bottom of the Science Inc. section?
Due to his role at Science, Jones was named one of Los Angeles's 500 most influential people by the Los Angeles Business Journal in 2014, 2017 and 2020 - 2024.[15][16][17][18][19]
Wikidelrey (talk) 21:14, 14 August 2024 (UTC) Wikidelrey (talk) 21:14, 14 August 2024 (UTC)
Okay, on reflection I think this is probably inappropriate anywhere, using the rule of thumb that an award is WP:DUEWEIGHT to include if it has its own Wikipedia page. It appears to have been originally added by an IP in 2017 that also added a bunch of promotional cruft. Rusalkii (talk) 22:54, 14 August 2024 (UTC)
Ok, thank you for taking a look! Wikidelrey (talk) 01:22, 23 August 2024 (UTC)



Edit request: add public speaking/media section

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I have a conflict of interest (I am the subject of this biography), so I’m posting this as an edit request for an uninvolved editor to review.

  • **Request:** Please add a short, neutral section (suggested placement: after "Business career", before "Personal life") summarizing notable public speaking and media appearances, avoiding promotional language and avoiding long resume-like lists.
  • **Proposed wikitext:**

<nowiki>


Edit request

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Making a few small edit requests, if possible! Really appreciate the consideration.

  • What I think should be changed (#1): Add Final Boss Sour & Mindset care to this sentence in "Science Inc." section: Other startups that have come from Science include Liquid Death, where Jones sits on the board; Final Boss Sour; Mindset Care...
  • Why it should be changed: Adding additional Science-backed companies that Mike is involved with.
  • References supporting the possible change (format using the "cite" button): [20] [21] [22] [23] [24] [25]
  • What I think should be changed (#2): In the last graf of the "Science Inc." section, add this as the 2nd sentence: The Science Ventures division of the company raised another $50 million round in 2020.
  • Why it should be changed: Adding the most up-to-date funding information from Mike's company Science.
  • References supporting the possible change (format using the "cite" button): [26]
  • What I think should be changed (#3): Add to end of "Science Blockchain" section: Jones is an Organizer at Protego National Digital Trust Company, a conditionally approved bank for digital assets that’s built on blockchain, which is backed by Science Blockchain.
  • Why it should be changed: Add Mike's role with Protego National Digital Trust Company.
  • References supporting the possible change (format using the "cite" button): [27] [28] [29] [30]

Wikidelrey (talk) 19:32, 26 March 2026 (UTC)

@Ptrnext @Spintendo Hi all, just seeing if you might have any thoughts here, since you've graciously reviewed previous edit requests? Thank you, appreciate your time!
Wikidelrey (talk) 21:04, 24 April 2026 (UTC)

References

  1. Loizos, Connie (29 Jan 2021). "The biggest exit for this L.A. venture firm may wind up being . . . canned water". TechCrunch. Retrieved 10 Oct 2022.
  2. Geron, Tomio (6 Feb 2021). "Five Questions With...Science Inc.'s Mike Jones". Protocol. Retrieved 10 Oct 2022.
  3. Mashayekhi, Ray (4 Jan 2022). "Liquid Death Raises $75 Million in Funding at a $500 Million-Plus Valuation". dot.LA. Retrieved 10 Oct 2022.
  4. Mashayekhi, Rey (4 Jan 2022). "Liquid Death Raises $75 Million in Funding at a $500 Million-Plus Valuation". dot.LA. Retrieved 6 April 2023.
  5. Dave, Paresh (29 Mar 2017). "Rover.com acquires Santa Monica dog-sitting start-up DogVacay, which couldn't keep up". Los Angeles Times. Retrieved 6 April 2023.
  6. Ha, Anthony (11 Mar 2016). "The New York Times acquires influencer marketing agency HelloSociety". TechCrunch. Retrieved 6 April 2023.
  7. Ha, Anthony (11 Oct 2016). "Google acquires FameBit to connect YouTube creators with marketers". TechCrunch. Retrieved 6 April 2023.
  8. Takahashi, Dean (6 May 2015). "RockYou acquires PlayHaven as it moves deeper into mobile ad networks". GamesBeat. Retrieved 6 April 2023.
  9. "Kyoku acquired by The Feed". Crunchbase. 8 Jul 2021. Retrieved 6 April 2023.
  10. Pressberg, Matt (13 Apr 2014). "Mike Jones". Los Angeles Business Journal. Retrieved 25 July 2024.
  11. "LA 500: Michael Jones". Los Angeles Business Journal. 11 August 2017. Retrieved 25 July 2024.
  12. "LA500 2022: Michael Jones". Los Angeles Business Journal. 14 June 2022. Retrieved 25 July 2024.
  13. "LA500 2023: Michael Jones". Los Angeles Business Journal. 5 June 2023. Retrieved 25 July 2024.
  14. "LA500 2024: Michael Jones". Los Angeles Business Journal. 3 June 2024. Retrieved 25 July 2024.
  15. Pressberg, Matt (13 Apr 2014). "Mike Jones". Los Angeles Business Journal. Retrieved 25 July 2024.
  16. "LA 500: Michael Jones". Los Angeles Business Journal. 11 August 2017. Retrieved 25 July 2024.
  17. "LA500 2022: Michael Jones". Los Angeles Business Journal. 14 June 2022. Retrieved 25 July 2024.
  18. "LA500 2023: Michael Jones". Los Angeles Business Journal. 5 June 2023. Retrieved 25 July 2024.
  19. "LA500 2024: Michael Jones". Los Angeles Business Journal. 3 June 2024. Retrieved 25 July 2024.
  20. Just, Brooke (20 May 2025). "Final Boss Sour 'gaming up' for growth". Food Business News. Retrieved 26 March 2026.
  21. Just, Brooke (5 November 2024). "Sour candy snack maker raises $3 million". Food Business News. Retrieved 26 March 2026.
  22. Golden, Shauna (31 October 2024). "Leveling Up: Final Boss Sour Secures $3 Million". BevNet NOSH. Retrieved 26 March 2026.
  23. Rychlewski, Claire (20 August 2024). "Exclusive: Mindset Care raises $13M to ease Social Security disability applications". Axios. Retrieved 26 March 2026.
  24. Plescia, Marissa (22 August 2024). "Mindset Care Snags $13M to Simplify Disability Benefit Applications for Those with Serious Mental Illness". MedCityNews. Retrieved 26 March 2026.
  25. "Mindset Care Secures $13 Million to Simplify Disability Benefits for Mental Health Claimants". Slice of Healthcare. 21 August 2024. Retrieved 26 March 2026.
  26. Mills, Taylor (1 April 2024). "Science Names First New General Partner". Los Angeles Business Journal. Retrieved 26 March 2026.
  27. "Corporate Decision #1366" (PDF). Office of the Comptroller of the Currency. Retrieved 26 March 2026.
  28. "Protego Targets Crypto-Banking with OCC Approval". Banking Exchange. 8 February 2021. Retrieved 26 March 2026.
  29. Simpson, Annabelle (13 May 2022). "Who's Who In Crypto: Mike Jones, ex-Myspace CEO and co-founder & MD of the crypto and consumer venture firm Science Inc". Crypto Vista. Retrieved 26 March 2026.
  30. Zerucha, Tony (8 September 2022). "Science Inc.'s CEO has been investing in the future since Myspace". Future Nexus. Retrieved 26 March 2026.

Reply 20-MAY-2026

edit

🔼  Clarification requested  

  • Please provide the WikiLinks for Final Bass Sour & Mindset Care. Additionally, please provide the WikiLinks for The Science Ventures division and Protego National Digital Trust Company.
  • When ready to proceed with the requested information, kindly change the {{Edit COI}} template's answer parameter to read from |ans=y to |ans=n.

Thank you!
Regards,  Spintendo  18:12, 20 May 2026 (UTC)

Thanks so much, @Spintendo! Final Boss Sour, Mindset Care, and Protego National Digital Trust Company do not have Wikipedia pages / WikiLinks. There is also no separate Wikipedia page for The Science Ventures division, there's just the main Science Inc. page. Please let me know if you need anything else and what you think about these edit requests. Wikidelrey (talk) 18:19, 20 May 2026 (UTC)


Updates Requests

edit

Hi fellow Wikipedians,

I have disclosed my WP:COI on my talk page and would appreciate your assistance in incorporating these updates to ensure the page remains current and accurate.

1.- Add: As Executive Vice President of Digital Strategy at Universal Music Group, Nash oversees the company's global digital business development and platform partnerships. In this capacity, he led negotiations for licensing agreements with major streaming services, including Spotify,[1] Apple Music,[2] Amazon,[3][4][5] and Tencent Music,[6][7] as part of the organization's shift toward digital-first distribution models.

  • Placement: Universal Music Group section, second paragraph
  • Rationale: This addition adheres to WP:BIO and WP:NPOV by providing a factual, neutral account of the subject’s core professional responsibilities. It ensures the entry meets WP:DUE requirements for completeness by contextualizing his role in the industry's transition to digital streaming.

2- Add: In response to the development of generative AI, Nash oversaw the integration of intellectual property protections into Universal Music Group's licensing renewals with TikTok[8][9][10] and YouTube.[11][12][13] These agreements established frameworks for artist attribution and compensation regarding the use of AI-generated content on those platforms.

  • Placement: Universal Music Group, last sentence
  • Rationale: This addition provides a neutral, factual account of Nash's role in recent high-profile licensing negotiations, which is a central part of his professional record. By documenting these developments without using promotional language, it follows WP:NPOV and ensures the article remains comprehensive under WP:DUE.

3.- Add: In his capacity as head of Digital Strategy, Nash managed Universal Music Group’s partnerships with artificial intelligence and technology companies. This includes overseeing collaborations with firms such as Nvidia,[14][15] Stability AI,[16][17] Splice,[18] Klay,[19][20] and Udio[21] to integrate generative AI tools into the company’s digital ecosystem.

  • Placement: After previous entry
  • Rationale: This addition provides essential context regarding the subject’s current professional focus on emerging technology, adhering to WP:DUE by reflecting significant industry developments. It maintains a neutral, factual tone in compliance with WP:NPOV.

4.- Update (current entry): Nash was listed on Billboard’s "Power 100" in 2016, 2017, 2018, and 2019.

  • Proposed change: From 2016 to 2026, Nash has been named on every Billboard Power 100 list.[22][23][24][25][26][27][28][29]
  • Placement: Recognition, first sentence
  • Rationale: This update keeps the page current by reflecting a significant, decade-long milestone in the subject’s career, which is supported by WP:V. It uses neutral, factual reporting to accurately document his sustained professional standing through 2026.

Thank you! TheBlueOwl (talk) 02:08, 11 May 2026 (UTC)

TheBlueOwl,
Yes I made a few tweaks to your proposed entries to make them more concise and neutral.
It might be necessary to keep the subject's work in UMG in chronological order. Thanks! IBWikiFellow (talk) 23:15, 20 May 2026 (UTC)


COI: Professional background

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Hi everyone, I have disclosed my WP:COI on my talk page and would appreciate your assistance in incorporating these updates to ensure the page provides well-supported, relevant details.

1. Add: Nash joined Warner Music Group (WMG) in 2000, serving in various senior management roles. In June 2008, he was named Executive Vice President of Digital Strategy and Business Development, where he oversaw global digital operations until leaving the company in 2011.[30][31]

  • Placement: WMG: First paragraph
  • Rationale: The basic factual details of this corporate history are verified by independent secondary coverage in Variety, alongside supplementary corporate history from the Universal Music Group investor relations site (per WP:ABOUTSELF).

1. Add:' Nash's career includes working in digital strategy at Warner Music Group from 2000 to 2011, following executive roles within the digital media sector.[32]

  • Placement: Lead section, second sentence
  • Rationale: Expanding the lead section to better summarize the subject's career trajectory in accordance with WP:LEAD. The addition establishes a balanced overview of his professional background. All claims are neutral (WP:NPOV) and verifiable.

2. Add: In 2023, Michael Nash led a Universal Music Group (UMG) partnership with Deezer to launch an “artist-centric” streaming model. The initiative aimed to reward active user engagement and artist-fan relationships by increasing earnings for designated “professional artists” while de-emphasizing “noise audio.”[33][34][35]

  • Placement: Universal Music Group, Third paragraph, second sentence
  • Rationale: This addition documents a career milestone regarding the UMG–Deezer streaming initiative led by the subject, expanding upon his documented history in digital streaming policy. The proposed entry is well-supported by independent, third-party sources WP:V and framed neutral per WP:NPOV.

3. Add: Nash oversaw initiatives to expand Universal Music Group (UMG) into the health and wellness sectors. In 2021, the company partnered with digital therapeutics firm MedRhythms to establish a music licensing framework for their prescription-based neurologic treatment platform. Later, in 2025, UMG teamed up with Apple Music to launch the "Sound Therapy" audio collection for relaxation and focus. Nash described the programs as structural shifts from traditional streaming models aimed at utilizing music as a therapeutic tool.[36][37]

  • Placement: Universal Music Group, after third paragraph
  • Rationale: The proposed addition details the subject's leadership in UMG’s health, wellness, and functional audio partnerships verified by third-party industry coverage WP:V and written neutrally in compliance with WP:NPOV.

4. Add: In 2005, as Senior Vice President, Digital Strategy and Business Development, Nash coordinated WMG’s partnership with Verizon Wireless for the launch of its V Cast service. The agreement made WMG’s music video catalog available for download on mobile devices, marking one of the early instances of mobile video distribution in the United States.

  • Placement: Warner Music Group, after second paragraph
  • Rationale: The addition details the subject's executive role at Warner Music Group regarding early mobile and wireless distribution partnerships, verified by third-party industry coverage WP:V and written neutrally in compliance with WP:NPOV.[38][39]

Thank you! TheBlueOwl (talk) 13:26, 26 May 2026 (UTC)

TheBlueOwl, before touching the lead, can you verify that his 2000–2011 tenure at WMG is already fully detailed and sourced in the Career section of the article. Wrontheroof (talk) 04:22, 16 June 2026 (UTC)
Hi Wrontheroof, I made an adjustment to the initial request to address the subject's history in WMG before adding this information to the lead section. TheBlueOwl (talk) 00:49, 17 June 2026 (UTC)
TheBlueOwl  Done I made the edits whilst keeping the proposed text. Wrontheroof (talk) 23:30, 21 June 2026 (UTC)

References

  1. Peoples, Glenn (March 7, 2025). "UMG Is 'In Conversations' With Multiple Streamers on Super-Premium Tiers. That's Good News for Everybody". Billboard. Retrieved May 5, 2026.
  2. Vlessing, Etan (October 27, 2022). "Universal Music Group Digital Chief Touts Apple Music Price Hike, Spotify Subscriber Growth". Hollywood Reporter. Retrieved May 5, 2026.
  3. Stassen, Murray (January 27, 2022). "Universal expands agreements with Twitch and Amazon Music". Music Business Worldwide. Retrieved May 5, 2026.
  4. Robinson, Kristin (January 28, 2022). "UMG Expands Relationship With Twitch and Amazon Music". Billboard. Retrieved May 5, 2026.
  5. Ingham, Tim (October 2, 2020). "Amazon Music partners with Universal, Warner to exclusively offer streaming albums in 'better than CD quality' Ultra HD". Music Business Worldwide. Retrieved May 5, 2026.
  6. Sutherland, Mark (May 16, 2017). "Universal signs Tencent deal to open up Chinese market, launches Abbey Road China". Music Week. Retrieved May 5, 2026.
  7. Ingham, Tim (May 16, 2017). "Universal signs major licensing deal with Tencent in China". Music Business Worldwide. Retrieved May 5, 2026.
  8. Robinson, Kristin (January 29, 2026). "UMG's Chief Digital Officer Talks Udio Deal, Suno Lawsuit — And What Really Happened With TikTok in 2024". Billboard. Retrieved May 5, 2026.
  9. Peoples, Glenn (May 3, 2024). "The New Universal Music Group-TikTok Deal Explained". Billboard. Retrieved May 5, 2026.
  10. Stassen, Murray (February 8, 2021). "TikTok and Universal Music Group sign global licensing deal". Music Business Worldwide. Retrieved May 5, 2026.
  11. Stassen, Murray (October 30, 2025). "UMG has struck a new YouTube deal that includes 'guardrails' around AI… and 3 other things Sir Lucian Grainge said on Universal's Q3 earnings call". Music Business Worldwide. Retrieved May 5, 2026.
  12. Edwards, Gavin (June 19, 2019). "That Glitchy Music Video on YouTube? It's Getting an Upgrade". New York Times. Retrieved May 5, 2026.
  13. "YouTube Music and Universal Music Group change the way you see music". YouTube Blog. June 19, 2019. Retrieved May 5, 2026.
  14. Rys, Dan (January 6, 2026). "Universal Partners With NVIDIA AI on Music Discovery, Fan Engagement & Creation Tools". Billboard. Retrieved May 5, 2026.
  15. Stassen, Murray (January 6, 2026). "UMG's latest major AI partnership arrives via tech giant NVIDIA, with promise of 'antidote to generic AI slop'". Music Business Worldwide. Retrieved May 5, 2026.
  16. Aswad, Jem (October 30, 2025). "Universal Music Settles Udio Lawsuit, Partners With Stability AI to Develop 'Next-Generation Music Creation Tools'". Variety. Retrieved May 5, 2026.
  17. Dalugdug, Mandy (October 30, 2025). "UMG strikes strategic alliance with Stability AI to develop 'next-generation' AI music-making tools". Music Business Worldwide. Retrieved May 5, 2026.
  18. Stassen, Murray (December 19, 2025). "UMG and Splice team up to collaborate on 'next generation' AI music creation tools". Music Business Worldwide. Retrieved May 5, 2026.
  19. Robinson, Kristin (January 29, 2026). "UMG's Chief Digital Officer Talks Udio Deal, Suno Lawsuit — And What Really Happened With TikTok in 2024". Billboard. Retrieved May 5, 2026.
  20. "Universal Music Group partners with KLAY to develop ethical Artificial Intelligence Technology". El Economista (in Spanish). January 28, 2026. Retrieved May 5, 2026.
  21. Hiatt, Brian (October 31, 2025). "Why the Biggest Record Company Is Teaming Up With the AI-Music Company It Was Just Suing". Rolling Stone. Retrieved May 5, 2026.
  22. "Billboard's Inaugural Digital Power Players List Revealed". Billboard. Retrieved 7 November 2016.
  23. "Billboard Change Agents: Leaders Stepping Up In A Year of Turmoil". Billboard. January 28, 2021. Retrieved May 5, 2026.
  24. "The 2022 Billboard Power List Revealed". Billboard. January 26, 2022. Retrieved May 5, 2026.
  25. "Billboard 2023 Power 100 List". Billboard. Retrieved May 5, 2026.
  26. "Billboard Power List 100". Billboard. Retrieved May 5, 2026.
  27. "Billboard 2024 Power 100 List Revealed". Billboard. Retrieved May 5, 2026.
  28. "Billboard 2025 Power 100 List". Billboard. Retrieved May 5, 2026.
  29. "Billboard 2026 Power 100 List". Billboard. Retrieved May 5, 2026.
  30. "Board & Governance". Universal Music Group. Retrieved May 5, 2026.
  31. Hayes, Dade (February 25, 2008). "WMG lifts digital guru to strategy gig". Variety. Retrieved May 5, 2026.
  32. "Board & Governance". Universal Music Group. Retrieved May 5, 2026.
  33. Nicolaou, Anna (January 31, 2023). "Universal Music in talks with big platforms to overhaul streaming model". Finantial Times. Retrieved May 5, 2026.
  34. Aswad, Jem (September 6, 2023). "Universal Music Group and Deezer to Launch New, 'Artist-Centric' Streaming Payment Model". Variety.
  35. Ingham, Tim (October 25, 2023). "Spotify is embracing elements of Universal Music Group's 'artist-centric' royalties model – following a new multi-year licensing deal between UMG and Daniel Ek's platform". Music Business World.
  36. Millman, Ethan (September 29, 2021). "Can Music Rehabilitate Stroke Victims? Universal Music Group Thinks So". Rolling Stone. Retrieved May 5, 2026.
  37. Paine, Andre (May 13, 2025). "Apple Music teams with UMG on audio wellness collection Sound Therapy". Music Week. Retrieved May 5, 2026.
  38. "Verizon adds music videos to V Cast". NBC. February 1, 2005. Retrieved May 15, 2026.
  39. Paine, Andre (May 13, 2025). "Warner Music Group Announces Transition in Digital Strategy Team". Security Exchange Commission. Retrieved May 5, 2026.


COI: Executive roles and initiatives

edit

Hi fellow Wikipedians,

I have disclosed a WP:COI regarding this subject on my talk page. I would like to propose a few factual updates to add details regarding the subject's roles and top initiatives. I have provided the specific text changes along with independent, high-quality secondary sources below for your review.

1. Add: “WMG brought back Nash appointing him as Head Business Development Executive in 2015 to serve as global digital strategy and business development advisor.[1]

  • Placement: Warner Music Group section, last paragraph
  • Rationale: This update provides a factually neutral record of an appointment using an independent, secondary industry source to ensure completeness of the biographical timeline.

2. Add: In October 2017, with Michael Nash serving as executive vice president of digital strategy, UMG launched an accelerator engagement network aimed at developing music-based startups.[2]

  • Placement: Universal Music, second to last paragraph
  • Rationale: This update adds this documented 2017 initiative using an independent, secondary industry source per Verifiability (WP:V) and (WP:RS).

3. Update: From 1991 through 1994, Nash joined the Voyager Company, serving as Director of the Criterion Collection.[3]

  • Current entry: He earlier served as director of the Criterion Collection
  • Placement: Career, 2nd sentence

4. Add: While serving as a partner at The Voyager Company, Nash was involved in the acquisition and development of several contemporary film releases for The Criterion Collection, including Robert Altman's Short Cuts and the anime film Akira. Under Nash's direction, Criterion expanded its catalog to include LaserDisc editions of contemporary Black cinema, releasing titles such as John Singleton’s Boyz N the Hood and the Hughes brothers’ Menace II Society.[4][5]

  • Placement: Career, 2nd sentence
  • Rationale: This update adds verified historical details regarding the subject's early career, supported by independent, high-quality secondary sources in accordance with WP:V, WP:RS, and WP:NPOV.

Thank you! TheBlueOwl (talk) 22:42, 8 July 2026 (UTC) TheBlueOwl (talk) 22:42, 8 July 2026 (UTC)

References

  1. Kafka, Peter (June 17, 2015). "Warner Music Group Brings Back Digital Veteran Michael Nash to Head Biz Dev". VOX. Retrieved June 14, 2026.
  2. Garner, George (October 17, 2017). "Universal Music Group launches accelerator engagement network to 'support the next generation of entrepreneurs'". Music Week. Retrieved June 14, 2026.
  3. "Michael Nash, EVP, Digital Strategy, Universal Music Group". Music Business Worldwide. Retrieved June 14, 2026.
  4. Hunt, Joshua (February 29, 2024). "Sure, It Won an Oscar. But Is It Criterion?". The New York Times. Retrieved June 14, 2026.
  5. Lombreglia, Ralph (June 5, 1997). "Digital Culture: What happened to multimedia?". The Atlantic. Retrieved June 14, 2026.
Question:
  • Where it states While serving as a partner at The Voyager Company, Nash was involved in the acquisition and development of several contemporary film releases for The Criterion Collection Could you please clarify what the text means by "involved"? When ready to proceed, kindly change the {{Edit COI}} template's answer parameter to read from |ans=y to |ans=n. Thank you!

Regards,  Spintendo  01:47, 13 July 2026 (UTC)

Hi Spintendo,
Thank you for your feedback. The New York Times source states that Nash's role at Voyager/Criterion was centered on targeting and bringing in newer, contemporary films that fit a specific commercial and cultural profile.
To better match the source and eliminate the word "involved," we could tweak the text to read as follows:
"While serving as a partner at The Voyager Company, Nash focused on the acquisition and development of several contemporary film releases for The Criterion Collection, including Robert Altman's Short Cuts and the anime film Akira."
This keeps the entire sentence structurally intact but swaps out the ambiguous "involved in" for the source-backed phrase "focused on."
Please let me know if this adjustment is acceptable!
Best! TheBlueOwl (talk) 14:06, 13 July 2026 (UTC)


Image request

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Hi editors, I am making this request on behalf of Mastercard via my work at Beutler Ink. Will editors consider adding File:Michael Miebach.jpg to the infobox of this article? Thank you, Danilo Two (talk) 19:45, 13 March 2026 (UTC)

Thank you! Danilo Two (talk) 13:57, 16 March 2026 (UTC)


Request: Correcting birthplace and updating education

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Hi editors, I have two requests for your consideration, as a part of my work at Beutler Ink on behalf of Mastercard.

Michael Miebach
Miebach (2018)
Born1968 (age 5758)
Education
OccupationBusiness executive
Known forCEO of Mastercard
  • Infobox updates: I would like to update the infobox with a few fixes:
    • Update birthplace from Allgäu, Germany to Obergünzburg, Germany
    • User {{ubl}} in education
    • Shorten known for from CEO of US financial services provider Mastercard to CEO of Mastercard
  • Early life and education: I am requesting an update to the Early life and education section to clarify Miebach's birthplace and educational background for accuracy and better readability:
    • Replace Miebach was born in the Allgäu region in 1968 and grew up in Obergünzburg and, for a time, in Hamburg. with Miebach was born in Obergünzburg, Allgäu, Bavaria, Germany in 1968.
    • Replace He studied business administration at the University of Passau, where he earned a master's degree. with He studied business administration and managerial economics at the University of Passau in Germany, where he completed his Master of Business Administration.
    • Replace He also completed further training at Harvard Business School. with Miebach also completed the Advanced Management Program at Harvard Business School.

Thank you, Danilo Two (talk) 20:31, 7 July 2026 (UTC)

@Afus199620: Thank you for making this update. I did notice that the sentence about the Harvard Business School program is missing its citation. Would you mind adding the FinTech Magazine citation? Thanks! Danilo Two (talk) 13:37, 8 July 2026 (UTC)
Done.--Afus199620 (talk) 14:55, 8 July 2026 (UTC)
Looks good. Thank you! Danilo Two (talk) 15:09, 8 July 2026 (UTC)


Request: Updating Career

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Hi editors, I have another request for your consideration, as a part of my work at Beutler Ink on behalf of Mastercard.

I'd like to request implementation of my proposed Career section, which is written neutrally and grounded in reliable sourcing. It more clearly delineates Miebach's career before and after joining Mastercard, adds relevant detail on his role in positioning the company as a technology-focused platform, and removes Mastercard.com as a source. No existing information is removed, the changes only add well-reported detail and new wikilinks where appropriate. See below:

Afus199620: Pinging you here in case you're interested in this one as well. Thank you, Danilo Two (talk) 18:58, 9 July 2026 (UTC)


COI edit request: Awards and Editorial cleanup (article subject)

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Disclosure: I am the subject of this article (User:Drpnyc). In line with WP:COI, I am not editing the article directly but requesting the following changes, with independent sources, for an uninvolved editor to review. These changes are also intended to resolve the January 2023 "Formatting and refs not in ref tags" cleanup tag. === 1. Awards (please replace the current "Awards" section) === Please replace the lettered list and bare "Ref:" URLs with this formatted list: * 2012 – Award for Professional Standards of Excellence, American Association of Sexuality Educators, Counselors and Therapists (AASECT)[1] * 2015 – James W. Maddock Faculty Award, American Psychological Association, Society for Family Psychology (Division 43)[2] * 2019 – Award for Integrative Approaches to Sex Therapy, AASECT[3] * 2021 – Distinguished Sexual and Gender Health Revolutionary Medal, University of Minnesota Medical School, Program in Human Sexuality[4] * 2022 – Ronald W. Lewis Lifetime Achievement Award, Sexual Medicine Society of North America (SMSNA)[5] * 2026 – Excellence in Clinical Health Psychology Award, Society for Health Psychology (American Psychological Association, Division 38)[6] * 2026 – Lifetime Achievement Award, International Society for the Study of Women's Sexual Health (ISSWSH)[7] * 2026 – Distinguished Alumni Award, Teachers College, Columbia University[8] === 2. Editorial (please replace the current run-on paragraph with this list) === Current: * 2018–present – Contributor ("Sexual Tipping Point" blog), Psychology Today * 2018–present – Peer Reviewer, American Urological Association Erectile Dysfunction Guidelines * 2018–present – Scientific Board, Italian Journal of Clinical Sexology * 2017–present – Emeritus Editor-in-Chief, Current Sexual Health Reports (Springer); Editor-in-Chief, 2013–2017; Editorial Board, 2003–2009 * 2011–present – Editorial Board, International Journal of Impotence Research (Reviewer, 2001–present) * 2009–present – Reviewer, European Association of Urology (EAU) Guidelines * 2006–present – Reviewer, Urology; Journal of Sexual and Relationship Therapy * 2005–present – Reviewer, Journal of Urology; Journal of Andrology * 2004–present – Editorial Board (2008–2011) and Reviewer (2000–present), Journal of Sexual Medicine; Sexual Dysfunction Section, Faculty of 1000 Medicine * 1982–present – Consulting Editor, Journal of Sex & Marital Therapy Former: * 2019–2021 – Advisor (ejaculatory dysfunction), American Psychiatric Association DSM-5-TR Task Force and Work Group * 2014 – Member, World Health Organization Global Clinical Practice Network (GCPN) * 2008–2012 – Editorial Board, International Society for Sexual Medicine (ISSM) Newsbulletin * 2006–2014 – Advisory Board, Sexual Health & Medicine (SMSNA) * 2004–2013 – Advisor, American Psychiatric Association DSM-5 Task Force and Work Group * 2004–2013 – Editorial Board, Sexual Medicine Section, BJU International * 1994–1997 – Department Editor ("Sex Therapy Today"), Contemporary Urology * 1990–1992 – Consulting Editor, Journal of Integrative & Eclectic Psychotherapy * 1978–1981 – Consulting Editor, Journal of Sex Education and Therapy Drpnyc (talk) 22:03, 13 July 2026 (UTC) Drpnyc (talk) 22:03, 13 July 2026 (UTC)


COI edit request: complete rewrite

edit

Disclosure: I have a conflict of interest in relation to Micro Mobility Systems because I work as a consultant for the company. I have disclosed this on my user page and I'm requesting review rather than editing the article directly.

The current article has multiple issues including a promotional content notice, out of date and weak sources, and various citation issues.

Key changes in the proposed rewrite:

  • Removes any out of date or unsourced statements
  • Replaces promotional/product-focused content with a neutral company overview.
  • Uses higher authority more trustworthy independent sources

Proposed revised article:

=Midwives (magazine)=


Edit request: Update article following 2025 rebrand

edit

I am connected with the Royal College of Midwives (I work for Redactive, the agency that publishes its membership magazine) and therefore have a conflict of interest. I am requesting that an independent editor consider updating this article to reflect the magazine's 2025 rebrand. Suggested changes: Update the article title from Midwives to RCM Community if editors consider this appropriate under the article title policy. Update the lead to explain the magazine is quarterly not bi-monthly Update the lead to explain that the publication was rebranded in 2025 while remaining the official membership magazine of the Royal College of Midwives. Add a note to the History section documenting the 2025 rebrand. Update the external link to https://rcm.org.uk/community-magazine-home Possible wording for the lead:

RCM Community (formerly Midwives) is the official membership magazine of the Royal College of Midwives (RCM), and is published quarterly. The publication was rebranded from Midwives to RCM Community in 2025.

Sources supporting the change include: RCM Community homepage on the RCM website – https://rcm.org.uk/community-magazine-home/ RCM Linkedin post announcing the rebrand – https://www.linkedin.com/posts/on-the-fourteenth-day-of-our-advent-we-wanted-share-7406039737632833536-GDR8/?utm_source=share&utm_medium=member_desktop&rcm=ACoAAAMXqI4BxWwHi2C3mJNz2HRb7COCNdKHi9I Thank you for considering this request. ~2026-38676-30 (talk) 15:31, 8 July 2026 (UTC)


sources

edit

trying to avoid stacking too many of these, but just saw an edit made to the page so maybe there's an active watcher?

source for fact about Phil King leaving Lush in 2016:

{{cite news|no-tracking=true|url=https://pitchfork.com/news/69104-lush-bassist-phil-king-leaves-band-shows-canceled/|first=Sam|last=Sadomsky|date=2016-10-18|title=Lush Bassist Phil King Leaves Band, Shows Canceled|work=Pitchfork}}

source for fact about Michael Conroy joining them on bass for the final gig:

{{cite news|no-tracking=true|url=https://pitchfork.com/news/69843-lush-breaking-up-again-announce-final-show/|title=Lush Breaking Up Again, Announce Final Show|first=Noah|last=Yao|date=2026-11-15|work=Pitchfork}}

Morwen (talk) 19:13, 3 June 2026 (UTC)


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  1. "Professional Standard of Excellence Award". American Association of Sexuality Educators, Counselors and Therapists. Retrieved July 13, 2026.
  2. "Awards and Honors Across Weill Cornell Medicine – Week of May 27 – June 3". Weill Cornell Medicine. June 2016. Retrieved July 13, 2026.
  3. "Award for Integrative Approaches to Sex Therapy". American Association of Sexuality Educators, Counselors and Therapists. Retrieved July 13, 2026.
  4. "Program in Human Sexuality Annual Report 2021" (PDF). University of Minnesota Medical School. Retrieved July 13, 2026.
  5. "Ronald W. Lewis Lifetime Achievement Award". Sexual Medicine Society of North America. Retrieved July 13, 2026.
  6. "2026 Awards & Recognition – Current Year Award Recipients". Society for Health Psychology. 2026. Archived from the original on July 13, 2026. Retrieved July 13, 2026.
  7. "Awards – ISSWSH Lifetime Achievement Award". International Society for the Study of Women's Sexual Health. Retrieved July 13, 2026.
  8. "Meet TC's 2026 Alumni Award Honorees". Teachers College, Columbia University. July 7, 2026. Retrieved July 13, 2026.
  9. 1 2 Holder, Sarah (1 October 2018). "What Scooters Were Always Supposed to Be". The Atlantic. Retrieved 7 May 2026.
  10. 1 2 Reid, Carlton (18 March 2019). "Bicycling, Take A Hike: The Micromobility Revolution Will Be Motorized". Forbes. Retrieved 7 May 2026.
  11. de la Torre, Alberto (23 June 2023). "Llega el Microlino: el heredero eléctrico del BMW Isetta que ya se puede pedir en España". Xataka. Retrieved 7 May 2026.