Wikipedia:Background noise

(Redirected from Wikipedia:BACKGROUNDNOISE)
Similar to how image noise can obsfucate the details of an image for the viewer, redirects whose only page views come from background noise can obsfucate meaningful search results for the Wikipedia reader.

In RfD discussions, the metaphor of background noise is occasionally used as an argument for the deletion of certain redirects.

The metaphor

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Just like how background noise is trivial, unimportant and should be ignored (cf. the phrase everything else is background noise[1]), so are the view counts of frankly useless redirects which have existed long enough to amass several dozens or even hundreds of views since their creation by virtue of their mere existence.

Causes

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Nevertheless, page views considered 'background noise' have to come from somewhere. Sources of background noise include, but are not limited to:

Limits

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There is no definitive cut-off point as to how many all-time page views (ATPV) are above being considered background noise. However, a general guideline that can be used for redirects of any article is 500 or fewer ATPV; any redirect which has more ATPV is generally unlikely to come from 'background noise'. That being said, the guideline for ancient redirects (i.e. pre-July 2015[c]) and redirects to articles with hundreds of thousands or millions of monthly views can be raised higher than that, to 1000 ATPV or fewer, or even higher in special circumstances.[d][e]

Etymology

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The earliest usage of this phrase on English Wikipedia seems to come from a reply by MartinRe written on 12 July 2006, in reference to cross namespace redirects obsfucating encyclopaedic results for readers.

See also

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Notes

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  1. Note that identified non-human hits (which account for the majority) are by-default excluded from page view counts.
  2. This is especially the case with partial-title-match redirects.
  3. This is the month and year when page views first began to be uniformly recorded for all Wikipedia pages, including redirects.
  4. 'Special circumstances' can include, for example, a redirect being linked in a well-viewed article for a few minutes, hours, or days before being unlinked; thereby gaining hundreds or thousands of views during its short stint in the article, but otherwise having negligible views outside of it.
  5. Remember, however, that as you increase the bar of 'enough' ATPV, you also increase the chance that you will inconvenience readers who actually find the redirect useful.

References

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