Hoi,
Typically such items were created because the article about the award mentions them. So it is all a matter of perspective. When the award is leading, the information about an award winner is in the article on the award. Having all these awardees on the article is not so great, it is not what we do.

Impossible? Certainly not. Reat the damn article (on the award).
Thanks,
     GerardM

On 31 May 2015 at 17:06, Daniel Kinzler <daniel.kinzler@wikimedia.de> wrote:
Am 31.05.2015 um 15:21 schrieb Gerard Meijssen:
> Hoi,
> When someone or something received an award, it is needed if only to complete
> the list of recipients of that award.. There is no benchmark for enough
> information. The notion that you a Nobel award winner is not relevant is
> poppycock. With automated descriptions awards do show.

If you have an item that says someone whon a nobel prize, but not when or which,
and also does *noit* have a label, that items is quite useless; it'S impossible
to tell which person it is even referring to.

That is what markus is talking about. For people, if there is a label, we
already have pretty good info. But if there is no label, we have a problem, and
if there isn't any other identifying info,m the item is useless.


--
Daniel Kinzler
Senior Software Developer

Wikimedia Deutschland
Gesellschaft zur Förderung Freien Wissens e.V.

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