User talk:50.228.51.170

Request to revaluate and remove cautionary template messages from the CIOMS Wikipedia page
For your consideration:

The CIOMS Wikipedia page is an important reference for the worldwide community of pharmaceutical professionals, medical science and public health professionals, clinical practitioners, and for the general public at large, in particular, in whose interest this reference was undoubtedly created and for whom the activities of CIOMS are meant ultimately to serve. While the information contained within the reference is specific and does include technical references that address activities undertaken by pharmaceutical and medical professionals in the work they do, the article also provides an unmatched, and yet brief, explanation of the CIOMS organization, its reason for being, details about its significance in the pursuit of ensuring patient safety, and its relevance to the health and wellbeing of the public at large- all of which serve the general public, globally, and provides a bit of transparency about how the pharmaceutical industry operates, an industry otherwise widely considered to be overly nebulous. It is with these considerations in mind that a proposal to remove the template message which cautions users the article contains excessive intricate detail of interest to only a particular audience is made.

CIOMS is an international nongovernmental, nonprofit, organization established by the World Health Organization with the goal of furthering the advancement of health and wellbeing for all people by providing standards and governance paradigms to facilitate an harmonious approach to certain activities of the Biomedical and public health communities, as a service to the global community at large. While CIOMS does take revenue from certain services it provides, this revenue is drawn from the biomedical community rather than from individual public consumers, and is used to both sustain those services and to fund the organization so that it may continue to provide unmatched benefit to the global public at large, in whose interest and name those services are provided and this organization persists. It is with these considerations in mind that a proposal to remove the template message which cautions users the article is written like an advertisement is made.

Most contributions to the CIOMS Wikipedia page do appear to have been made by those individuals who are very close to the subject matter, though if this is the case, then it is because these contributors are most familiar with the topic and because the intention of this Wikipedia page is to bring transparency to the general public about a topic that would otherwise not be transparent, and to bring useful information to the public at large about how a large and often misunderstood industry, in part, operates in their interest. The requirements that Wikipedia maintains regarding the need for parties who may have a conflict of interest to disclose those conflicts, or their associations to the subject matter aside, establishing a conflict of interest among these contributors who have made their contributions in the publics interest about an organization established to serve the public interest, may be a misappropriated concern. Because CIOMS does not sell anything to the public, because it is not a private organization, because it does not derive a profit, and because it is an extension of an international, multinational organization dedicated to addressing the health and welfare concerns of all people around the world, it is with these considerations in mind that a proposal to remove the template message which cautions users the article is written in large measure by a contributor that is close to the subject matter should be removed- in this case, not because the contributor is not close to the subject matter, but because the cautionary message implies a conflic of interest which is not apparent and which would be an unreasonable concern given the subject matter and the intent of those contributions. 50.228.51.170 (talk) 15:18, 1 July 2021 (UTC) Matthew Carney.