On 3/14/07, Andrew Gray <shimgray(a)gmail.com> wrote:
talk-page was that I'd turned up a letter to a
newspaper from a
relative of the subject which mentioned, in passing, the correct
deathdate - it seemed fair to accept that where sources differed,
going to a source as close as possible to the subject seemed the most
accurate.
If you've got two sources saying different things, NPOV generally
encourages you to cite both. I did something like this in [[Kate
McTell]] where half the sources I used claimed that Ruby Glaze was a
pseudonym, and half said they were two distinct people. IMHO it's much
easier to convince the reader that you're right if you cite both
versions and explain why one is more likely.
I really don't see anything wrong with me
footnoting a) as "was born
in Such-and-Such<ref>Personal correspondence with the Wikimedia
Foundation, June 17th, reference ABC1234567</ref>. Yes, we could ask
them to issue a rather dull press release, or write a blog post, or
(in one case I recall) update the details on their myspace page. But
no reasonable academic or reporter objects to incorporating
corrections of trivial, non-contentious details from those who know
about the article; why should we?
Well, the obvious problem is that a future editor is not going to know
the background to the problem, and, following policy, will probably
reinstate the "public record" version. That's why "private
correspondance" just isn't good enough in most cases. It's just not
durable enough.
Steve