Wikipedia:Articles for deletion/MySupermarket (3rd nomination)


 * The following discussion is an archived debate of the proposed deletion of the article below. Please do not modify it. Subsequent comments should be made on the appropriate discussion page (such as the article's talk page or in a deletion review).  No further edits should be made to this page.

The result was   keep. Seraphimblade Talk to me 21:41, 10 October 2017 (UTC)

MySupermarket
AfDs for this article: 
 * – ( View AfD View log  Stats )

We're all too familiar with the concept of promotionalism, even when disguised in which this should be no different, see the sources: Attempts to find other coverage only lead to this, of which only half of that is new since the last AfD. When there's such a dry desert of coverage, it shows us there's not actually any coverage, and the few existing are all pre-packaged from the company's own hands. As if it weren't worse, 1 of the "Keep" voters in the last AfD was compromised by the fact an undisclosed paid user participated, therefore bringing everything into question once again. As by our Terms of Use, that is immediate violation in anything, regardless of anything. The last AfD was labeled as "improve it, not delete" but the history shows no serious signs of this, nearly a year later, and a year before that, the company account was involved; improving something that either was pre-used by the company or after, shows nobody actually found the evidence of change. Ⓩⓟⓟⓘⓧ Talk 22:07, 25 September 2017 (UTC)
 * Source 1, 2, 4-6, 8-10, 14, 15, 18-20 are all locally-targeted or based indiscriminate publishers, including such words as "Changing the face of shopping", "[They] allow you to shop", "food of £45.30, olive oil at £1.49, potatoes for £1.78, £1.18, saving, sauges, £1.18 saving", "[they] show the potential....", "MySupermarket promises a seamless and simple....[Employee] said:....designed to to be uncomplicated...."
 * Source 7 is yet another indiscriminate comparison, (article begins with company stamp, continues on and ends with "visit website" and the quote "free shipping for baskets over $75.00" and Source 13 follows it quite closely with unquestionable ease
 * Source 11 is is a business partner quote
 * Source 12 is no-URL link7
 * Source 14, 16 and 17 are all indiscriminate local news in the US about the company's initiated plans; this bears nothing but to show the company has unrelenting ties overseas, which any company; international or local.
 * sorry, I apparently did mistakenly delete 2 comments. But what I said remains true: the material is promotional .I'm going to try to restore this page as it should be.  DGG ( talk ) 02:46, 3 October 2017 (UTC)
 * Note: This debate has been included in the Article Rescue Squadron's list of content for rescue consideration. —Syrenka V (talk) 01:56, 2 October 2017 (UTC)
 * Note: This debate has been included in the list of United Kingdom-related deletion discussions. Ⓩⓟⓟⓘⓧ Talk 22:25, 25 September 2017 (UTC)


 * Comment -- Comparison of MySupermarket to Tesco is the same as comparison of Kayak.com to British Airways. One is a website; the other has physical plant and has an offering of its own.  The last time this article when through AfD, there were lots of promises to clean things up.  The article is still an ode. The choice of statistics is precious promotion. I looked on Alexa. Some are outright lies.  I would start by deleting every sentence that is followed by a CN. Rhadow (talk) 23:26, 25 September 2017 (UTC)
 * Delete. It remains promotional. The onlychance of ever getting a cent article here is to remove this and let someone start over.  DGG ( talk ) 00:27, 26 September 2017 (UTC)
 * Please explain how the article remains promotional. Cunard (talk) 03:36, 26 September 2017 (UTC)


 * Keep per the sources provided by at Articles for deletion/MySupermarket (2nd nomination). The subject passes Notability. I've reviewed the article, which in general is neutral with very minor cleanup needed. Cunard (talk) 03:36, 26 September 2017 (UTC)
 * Pinging Articles for deletion/MySupermarket (2nd nomination) participants and closer:, , , , , , and . Cunard (talk) 03:36, 26 September 2017 (UTC)
 * Pinging Articles for deletion/MySupermarket participants:, , and . Cunard (talk) 04:21, 26 September 2017 (UTC)
 * Delete - Virtually nothing in the article is not promotional. DGG is absolutely correct, WP:TNT would apply here. The canvassing by another editor is very problematic as well.  Onel 5969  TT me 03:55, 26 September 2017 (UTC)
 * Comment: I've removed the unsourced and promotional material here. Cunard (talk) 04:21, 26 September 2017 (UTC)
 * Keep - Note in the last AFD the nominator stated and I quote "Delete Just grab a bucket and mop this SPAM up." - Clearly they have an axe to grind and want the article deleted and are seemingly trying any way they can to have it deleted, Anyway back on topic the article was promotional however Cunard has seen to that, The article includes indepth and reliable sourcing and so as such GNG is met, This AFD is nothing more than WP:IDHT and should be Speedy Kept. – Davey 2010 Talk 11:23, 26 September 2017 (UTC)
 * Comment – Below are some sources. More are available in various searches. North America1000 15:34, 26 September 2017 (UTC)



 References
 * The Guardian
 * DMG Media
 * Good Housekeeping
 * Marketing Week
 * ABC News
 * ABC News
 * The Grocer
 * The Grocer
 * Tech Crunch
 * Campaign


 * Keep Good sources emphasise notability. Dalliance (talk) 18:46, 26 September 2017 (UTC)


 * Keep the cleaned up version looks ok. Not too promotional, includes independant reviews. We don't need to delete every single business page and keep every cricket player that played one game. I find the bueiness pages more useful than the pagant winners and youtubers that get pages. Legacypac (talk) 23:17, 26 September 2017 (UTC)
 * Delete as there's enough in weight in our important factors here: WP:What Wikipedia is not and Terms of Use; the first because it's still clearly existing for promoting the company itself and that can unquestionably enough for removal alone but with the clause that an improved page can be restarted, and next, the Terms of Use because of the uncontested claims that this was in fact by the company's own hands without complying with said Terms of Use. Since Terms of Use is a principle over any guidelines, WP:GNG itself cannot alone actually outweigh a Foundation Policy. Also, a comment above suggests the nominator has an "axe to grind" and this couldn't be further from the case, since the last AfD and this, have had a different nominator both with different votes then and now, therefore this wouldn't be relevant to the general concerns that existed then and now: Unquestionable promotionalism and ToU violations. Another above claims there's additional sourcing but these in fact are the same ones currently in the article therefore no evidence of actual outside sourcing; also, to show if there's any genuine outside sourcing, the search that the WP:BEFORE gives, offers:
 * 1) -- A local story about a local customer
 * 2) -- a local trade article about locally relevant information
 * 3) -- general business announcement in a local publisher
 * 4) -- generally also, but this time with clear emphasis by the company website's sourcing itself
 * 5) -- A local guide for locally interested shoppers
 * 6) (on second page) -- 2 articles that share the same nature, because they consist of the same advice for local shoppers
 * 7) -- Same article but now in a clearer press releases form
 * 8) -- a general announcement involving another subject  As a summary, the next sources go back and forth to actually consist of either obvious or hidden similarities of all this
 * My conclusion of this was all actually also keeping in consistency with what the WP:Notability pages says: Significant, independent, reliable coverage that is independent of the subject and this obviously means exactly what it is: Coverage that is without exceptions independent; and so, because other sources may exist, this wasn't evidently the case since 2 pages quickly gave such primary-fueled sources. With or without the sufficient coverage, however, the weight of Foundation Policy is obviously a big factor here and it's one we shouldn't taken lightly in whatever circumstances of course. SwisterTwister   talk  05:15, 28 September 2017 (UTC)


 * Keep – Meets GNG, and the article has received copy editing to address tone matters after this AfD was initiated (e.g. diff). North America1000 18:46, 28 September 2017 (UTC)
 * Delete the sources are all local and promotional, not the type of sources to show notability for a corporation.John Pack Lambert (talk) 13:07, 29 September 2017 (UTC)
 * Comment – Regarding "the sources are all local and promotional": This Book Source, published by Springer Publishing, is certainly not local, nor is it promotional. North America1000 02:18, 9 October 2017 (UTC)


 * Keep but rewrite from scratch. (I have accordingly tagged the article with a rewrite template.) The deletion advocates have a point about the majority of the sources. The principal problem with most of the sources is lack of independence: they are too heavily sourced from mySupermarket itself. On the other hand, enough independent, reliable sources remain that they should allow an article to be written. Also, some of the deletionist arguments, especially those based on the Terms of Use (TOU) and WP:NOT, are without merit, and some deletionist arguments stretch the locality criterion from WP:AUD beyond the breaking point.
 * I've looked through all the sources provided (except for the ones from TheGrocer.co.uk and Greylock, whose text was not accessible in my browser). Four, all already present in the article, were reasonably independent and reliable:
 * The book Management and business research (Easterby-Smith, Thorpe, and Jackson 2015).
 * The 2013 review in Good Housekeeping by Sharon Franke and Harris Dupre.
 * The 2016 2006 review in the Guardian by Jill Papworth (the "Delivery Details" section at the end, sourced to mySupermarket, is separate from the main article).
 * The 2016 comparative review on AOL by Sarah Coles.
 * The others (from the article as it exists at present, from other participants, and a few I found on my own) all had serious problems:
 * The book Agent-mediated electronic commerce (David, Robu, Shehory, Stein, and Symeonidis 2013) at first sight looks like an ideal reference. Unfortunately, the actual material dealing with mySupermarket is from a chapter written by three programmers who actually built mySupermarket's electronic commerce system (see page 58 for this information), and is therefore not independent of the company.
 * The 2007 review in Money.co.uk by Ed Monk is apparently independent of mySupermarket, but is likely not a reliable source; it is owned by the same media group as the Daily Mail, a notoriously unreliable red-top tabloid.
 * The 2014 article in the Express by Nathan Rao is heavily sourced from mySupermarket's own director of marketing; also, the Express is owned by the same media group as the red-top Daily Star—and the Express itself, although not a red top, has had its own share of reliability issues.
 * The 2013 article in TechCrunch by Sarah Perez is almost entirely sourced to mySupermarket sources.
 * The 2016 article in Talking Retail is entirely sourced explicitly to mySupermarket.
 * The 2012 investment report in TechCrunch by Ingrid Lunden is mostly sourced from company sources, and much of it is speculative anyway.
 * The 2012 article in Campaign by Emma Powell is published by what amounts to an advertising agency.
 * The 2013 ABC 7 Los Angeles report by Ric Romero relies too heavily on mySupermarket as a source. (On the other hand, it should be considered regional, not local, by the standards of WP:AUD.)
 * The 2013 ABC 6 Philadelphia report by Amy Buckman likewise relies too heavily on mySupermarket as a source. (On the other hand, it too should be considered regional, not local, by the standards of WP:AUD.)
 * The 2016 review in MoneyHighStreet by "Diane" is apparently independent, but would likely count as self-published by Wikipedia's standards.
 * The book Net profit: how to succeed in digital business (Soskin 2010) is authored by the then Chair of mySupermarket!
 * The 2015 case study by Reblaze is from a company retained by mySupermarket to fortify their web security, and thus is not independent.
 * Despite all the sources that must be disqualified, the four that remain should allow a non-promotional, independently and reliably sourced article to be written. Another point worthy of mention: mySupermarket is used routinely as a data source (but not, unfortunately, as itself the focus of inquiry) in scholarly articles on web commerce, as a Google Scholar search will show. I intend to address deletionist arguments based on TOU, WP:NOT, and WP:AUD in a separate entry.
 * —Syrenka V (talk) 04:18, 1 October 2017 (UTC)
 * 4 wouldn't be enough; but, remember, the other major concern here wasn't only the promotionalism or the sources, but in fact the repeated Terms of Use violations of undisclosed paid editing and the clear negligence of not complying; such ToU can and should be considered an unquestionably valid basis for deletion, because it means appeasing undisclosed paid activity as actually valid, when it's not at all. SwisterTwister   talk  04:49, 1 October 2017 (UTC)
 * As noted, I'll address deletionist arguments based on TOU, WP:NOT, and WP:AUD in a separate entry; this includes the "appeasement" theory and the "unquestionably valid basis for deletion" claim. I'll also be attempting a clean-room rewrite of the article in my sandbox, keeping only the images and the four references identified above as independent and reliable. Often the easiest way to show that something is possible is to make it actual.
 * —Syrenka V (talk) 09:11, 1 October 2017 (UTC)


 * Update on rewrite: my clean-room rewrite of the article is now complete, and can presently be found in my sandbox. Note that it is almost as long as the present version of the article, except for the tags at the top and the reference list at the bottom. It does not include investment information, as none was available from the four legitimate sources I used. (WP:PROMO violations on Wikipedia often appear to be aimed at least as much at investors as at customers.) If this article is kept, I'm prepared to replace it immediately with this clean-room version.
 * —Syrenka V (talk) 01:34, 2 October 2017 (UTC)


 * reinserted material follows,:


 * Comment In my opinion, your rewrite is written with a promotional tone and focuses on the website (and how it works) as opposed to the company (and why the company is notable). Most of the "Price comparison" section is unnecessary and all of the "Ordering" section is unnecessary. These have no bearing on the notability of the company. The inclusion of details such as whether users are Amazon Prime members are simply promoting a USP. Adding in that the USA website offers filters is promotional. Describing that items have photographs serves no purpose in terms of notability of the company. Fair play for the first draft - I'd say cut deeper with the editing scalpel and it should be fine. -- HighKing ++ 15:21, 2 October 2017 (UTC)
 * My rewrite merely reflects the focus and concerns of the independent, reliable sources I used. The historical significance of a company's products and services (in mySupermarket's case, the website and its functionality) forms a large part of the historical significance of the company itself; it has all the bearing in the world on notability. For example, it is notable that mySupermarket was providing features for customization of virtual shelves in 2006 that were not commonly available at the time on retailer websites; and it remains notable whether or not online retailers in 2017 now routinely provide those features. Even aside from this particular innovation, the sources make clear that mySupermarket's comparison service was highly innovative when it was introduced, and thus was of historical significance. The mention of special handling for Amazon Prime and Aldi illustrates the flexibility and sophistication of the website's comparison methods. The ability to order from online retailers without bothering with their individual websites appears to be a historical innovation, and remains of significance whether or not other online comparison sites now also integrate shopping functionality.
 * Likewise, providing favorable information does not in itself create a "promotional tone". The three consumer reviews among my four sources were all highly favorable to mySupermarket; that favorability does not make them, nor my article, promotional. I actually went out of my way to include the few unfavorable details in the sources (no fresh produce, no customer reviews of the retailers).
 * I would very much have liked to include another type of historical significance: the comprehensive comparison service offered by mySupermarket has been at least as much a useful innovation for academic researchers on web commerce as it was for consumers, as a glance at Google Scholar makes obvious. The reason I didn't include that observation in the Wikipedia page is that it is original research—specifically, WP:SYNTH. As far as I could tell, the academic articles and books merely use data from mySupermarket—none of them act as secondary sources by observing that other academic sources make the same use of mySupermarket's data. If I've missed a secondary source that does make that observation, it should definitely be added to the Wikipedia page.
 * —Syrenka V (talk) 21:38, 2 October 2017 (UTC)


 * Keep Obviously the topic meets GNG on two continents, and it has been around since 2006 so attention to the topic is sustained.  I looked at Google scholar and confirmed that academia has an interest in an "online supermarket aggregator".  The topic is worthy of notice, but I've not seen much that needs the attention of an encyclopedia.  There is one sentence in the article that I think should be removed that talks about pricing.  I tend to agree with reducing the coverage.  I don't see the mention of Insights and Shops adding anything, or the description of the shopping experience.  We don't need to be told that investment money is used to get more customers.  Unscintillating (talk) 17:55, 2 October 2017 (UTC)
 * Inspired by Syrenka V, I've created my own rewrite at User:Unscintillating/MySupermarket. This is not a rewrite, though, as much as it is copy editing of the existing article.  Unscintillating (talk) 18:58, 2 October 2017 (UTC)
 * end of reinserted material. 

[insert begins here] Your response is indented to appear as a criticism of my rewrite, not Syrenka V's rewrite. Please clarify. Unscintillating (talk) 03:19, 3 October 2017 (UTC) [insert ends here]
 * Lookingat it, the second part of the SV version is details that would primarily concern those wanting to use the site. Such content is promotional.  DGG ( talk ) 00:37, 3 October 2017 (UTC)

So, DGG, why did you write over Syrenka V's comment, all 4,000 characters, to say that the content was promotional? Rhadow (talk) 00:45, 3 October 2017 (UTC)
 * For reasons given in the text itself, that you have deleted, the relevant details of the site's functionality are not necessarily promotional—especially when they directly address its historical significance. Introduction of types of functionality new to a particular form of web commerce remain of interest over a decade after the fact, and (as I pointed out in the deleted text) regardless of whether they remain unique to mySupermarket today. Note that one of the forms of functionality in question, customization of price comparison for the store-brand retailer Aldi, was mentioned in the textbook Management and business research (Easterby-Smith, Thorpe, and Jackson 2015), rather than in one of the consumer reviews I cited.
 * Your removal of relevant argumentation—including 's remarks to which I was responding, as well as my own remarks—is disruptive to this deletion discussion. Please restore all the deleted text immediately.
 * —Syrenka V (talk) 01:09, 3 October 2017 (UTC)
 * Looking at the page history, I just noticed that you also removed remarks by that immediately followed mine. Whether or not this was intentional, it too was disruptive, and I ask you to restore those remarks as well.
 * —Syrenka V (talk) 01:30, 3 October 2017 (UTC)

&'''Apologies, I did make an error in the editing. I'm restoring the deleted material in a minute or two.  DGG ( talk ) 02:48, 3 October 2017 (UTC) Done. But I never do that sort of thing deliberately--any of you could just have restored it themselves as well. I always appreciate people correcting my errors.  DGG''' ( talk ) 02:52, 3 October 2017 (UTC)
 * delete SOurces insufficient for notability. Looks G11. Certainly Deletion_policy. Dlohcierekim (talk) 02:19, 3 October 2017 (UTC)
 * Hello Thank you for restoring the deleted material—and for clarifying that such a deletion was not, and would never have been, intentional. I thought of restoring the deleted material myself, but I didn't know you well enough to be sure that the deletion was unintentional.
 * —Syrenka V (talk) 03:23, 3 October 2017 (UTC)


 * Comment on deletionist arguments that rely on the Wikimedia Terms of Use (TOU) and the Wikipedia policy WP:NOT: it is true that these policy-level documents would trump notability guidelines such as WP:N, WP:WEB, and WP:CORP if any conflict existed between them. But no such conflict exists on any matter relevant to this deletion discussion; in fact, TOU and WP:NOT create no grounds for page deletion not already fully covered in the notability guidelines.
 * By calling the document TOU "Terms of Use", the Wikimedia Foundation reserves the right to deny use of its sites, including Wikipedia, to violators. But it does not thereby even mandate denial of use to violators, including repeat violators; it merely authorizes such action, subject to the discretion of policy enforcers (such as Wikipedia administrators) as to what response to a particular set of violations is in Wikimedia's best interest. Still less does TOU mandate, or even authorize, root-and-branch eradication of everything done in violation of the Terms of Use. In fact, deleting anything on the ground of Terms of Use violation requires reasoning not included in the TOU document itself. The relevant reasoning, implicit in several deletionist entries above, and made explicit in the comment that keeping this page would be "appeasing undisclosed paid activity as actually valid", is that anything less than page deletion would amount to rewarding the paid malefactors and endorsing their work. But a number of heterogeneous considerations go into decisions whether to keep or delete pages, or to retain or remove text from a page; and nothing in TOU even makes rewarding or punishing Terms of Use violators one of those considerations, let alone a consideration capable of overriding all others.
 * Similarly, WP:NOT is concerned primarily with the end result, with what Wikipedia should not be—not with how we should respond when someone creates something that violates its specifications. Its section WP:WHATISTOBEDONE sketches a number of options, and directs the user to look elsewhere for more specific information. Its section WP:PROMO likewise defers to guidelines, particularly the notability guidelines WP:N and WP:CORP, for operational details of appropriate response. (Incidentally, the guideline WP:COI, too, is short on concrete operational specifics of appropriate response to violators.)
 * So although the policies in question could overrule the notability guidelines, they don't. TOU is silent on the matter, and WP:NOT actually directs the user through links to those same notability guidelines. And the notability guidelines, far from making reward or punishment of TOU violators an overriding concern, indicate clearly that preserving pages on notable topics is the overriding consideration in responding even to blatant advertising.
 * —Syrenka V (talk) 04:51, 3 October 2017 (UTC)


 * Comment on deletionist stretching of the locality criterion from WP:AUD (a section of WP:CORP): most if not all of the media publishing the sources I considered above—including the majority that I disqualified on various grounds other than WP:AUD, as well as the four I accepted as legitimate—would in my judgment qualify as at least regional, not local. WP:AUD doesn't really define where "local" ends and "regional" begins, nor does the article section Newspaper to which it links. But as I understand those terms, the reach of television stations affiliated with major networks in the USA or the UK, in particular (even those with "local" in their URLs, as in "abclocal") is such that all of them would qualify as regional; this is especially clear for those that serve major metropolitan areas. Similarly, a major USA metropolitan newspaper like the Philadelphia Inquirer or the Boston Globe would be regional, not local (and the New York Times and the Wall Street Journal would be national or even international).
 * Also, a review in a national or international publication, about a company serving the entire UK or USA, does not become "local" just because the reviewer evaluated it from the perspective of where they happened to live. Such a review remains relevant to the company's services throughout its range.
 * —Syrenka V (talk) 05:58, 3 October 2017 (UTC)


 * Comment on definitions (or other characterizations) of promotionalism: I propose what I call the Consumer Reports test—if a characterization of promotionalism leads to the conclusion that Consumer Reports is promotional, then that characterization is wrong. The characterization of promotionalism as a focus on the consumer functionality of products and services, as a focus on "details that would primarily concern those wanting to use" a product or service, fails this test very badly. The characterization of promotionalism as portrayal in a favorable light also fails. Consumer Reports is, as its name implies, almost entirely about consumer functionality; and although it frequently publishes harshly critical reviews, it also frequently publishes highly favorable ones.
 * What Consumer Reports does not do, is to publish biased reports. It even refuses advertising, specifically in order to avoid conflicts of interest that could lead to bias. I see promotionalism as a form of COI-driven bias; the most relevant Wikipedia policy is not WP:NOT, but WP:NPOV. That policy explains that the test for balance is reflection of what is in the sources, and WP:NPOV is clear that if the consensus of reliable and independent sources favors a particular conclusion, then the Wikipedia article based on them can and should favor that conclusion as well, and can do so without sacrificing neutrality. My rewrite of the present page portrays consumer functionality as the aspect of mySupermarket that contributes most to its historical significance and impact because the sources do. It's as simple as that, and it has nothing to do with promotion.
 * —Syrenka V (talk) 09:57, 3 October 2017 (UTC)

 Relisted to generate a more thorough discussion and clearer consensus. Relisting comment: Does anyone else endorse Syrenka V's rewrite as solving the initial concerns?

Please add new comments below this notice. Thanks, Ritchie333 (talk) (cont)  12:56, 3 October 2017 (UTC)
 * Comment I am much more in favour of Unscintillating's version. It is factual, strikes the correct encyclopedic tone and includes referenced support for each statement or claim. -- HighKing ++ 13:17, 3 October 2017 (UTC)
 * Comment I don't want to leave my draft in userspace for any length of time as it lacks full attribution, so I've copied it under at  Unscintillating (talk) 15:33, 3 October 2017 (UTC)
 * Comment I've also done a copy-under of my rewrite to, leaving only a link in my sandbox. Need I say—if my version is not adopted, I would strongly prefer adoption of 's version to deletion of the page. —Syrenka V (talk) 17:22, 4 October 2017 (UTC)
 * Keep, this is getting tedious. Multiple major publication sources are available (and were identified at the last AfD). Article appears to have been re-written (which is at least a positive result of this AfD nomination, but "sledgehammer" and "nut" spring to mind) and I certainly wouldn't describe it as promotional now. Sionk (talk) 18:06, 4 October 2017 (UTC)


 * Keep sufficient reliable sourcing exists. Antrocent (&#9835;&#9836;) 19:11, 4 October 2017 (UTC)
 * Delete -- just a shopping web site. Raised about $15M which strongly suggests it's WP:TOOSOON for an encyclopedia article. The coverage is shallow and the reviews offered are routine, as in:
 * "...described the site as easy to use, with better savings achieved when spending over $75.00 to avoid shipping charges..."
 * Does not meet WP:CORPDEPTH; wikipedia is not a directory. K.e.coffman (talk) 01:26, 5 October 2017 (UTC)
 * Hello The notability of mySupermarket stems solely from its role as a web application. If for some reason a nonprofit or a government entity took it over and continued to provide the same services, its notability would be unaffected. As a money-making business entity, mySupermarket is unremarkable—I agree that $15 million in capitalization is peanuts by corporate standards, and when I found that the four sources that survived my independence and reliability checks contained no investment information, my reaction was "good riddance". But writing off the site's web functionality as devoid of interest is a serious mistake. Since "just a shopping web site" is a somewhat different charge than promotionalism, terms-of-use violation, or purely local interest, I decided to give the site's Google Scholar results a second look, and found the following:
 * This article is primarily about the influence of an earlier web shopping application, BargainFinder, but mySupermarket gets an explanatory box (Figure 4) on page 25, along with a paragraph in the main text on the same page. Since this is an independent and reliable source, it could have been included in my rewrite if I had noticed it earlier. More fundamentally, the entire article in Computer is a counterexample to the idea that the functionality of shopping sites is only of interest to those who want to profit from them or to be their end-users. And even the end-users deserve some credit for reflective thought. The consumer reviews I used in my rewrite don't just say that mySupermarket can save money; they give information as to exactly how it can save money, so that any given reader can judge for themselves whether, and to what extent, the site's capabilities will enable them to save money. That—and not investment information—is the kind of depth relevant to a description of a web shopping application. The sources provide it, and do not treat it as routine at all.
 * —Syrenka V (talk) 04:36, 7 October 2017 (UTC)
 * —Syrenka V (talk) 04:36, 7 October 2017 (UTC)


 * Comment - I had been meaning to post some extra analysis since a user above claims the Terms of Use is not explicitly persecutive of undisclosed paid editing. However, from Terms of Use: These Terms of Use prohibit engaging in deceptive activities, including misrepresentation of affiliation, impersonation, and fraud. As part of these obligations, you must disclose your employer, client, and affiliation with respect to any contribution for which you receive, or expect to receive, compensation and then we also have: It is not excluded under the What Wikipedia is not policy (from WP:Notability) and we also equally have: Wikipedia is not a soapbox, an advertising platform, a vanity press followed by WP:SPIP's Publication in a reliable source is not always good evidence of notability. Self-promotion, autobiography, product placement and most paid material are not valid routes to an encyclopedia article or also WP:Not advocacy's Wikipedia is not a soapbox, a battleground, or a vehicle for propaganda, advertising and showcasing. Not only is all this from relevant policies and gudelines, the policies obviously taking precedence here but it makes clear that claims of significance or presumed notability are not an automatic factored-in exception to the Promotional or WP:Advocacy policies. None of the latest Keep comments have successfully refuted how our policies will in fact accept this, without violating our principles. As our WP:Policies page says, any changes to the fundaments here must be made by the necessary process, not by a particular AfD and because AfDs can be so fragmented, they cannot alone support all cases alone, unlike specific policies I've cited here. Also, in regards to special human interest as a subject, we specifically have WP:Not a charity, in addition to WP:Not advocacy. SwisterTwister   talk  02:39, 5 October 2017 (UTC)
 * I never denied that policy prohibits undisclosed paid editing. The point is that stating a prohibition is a different matter from saying how the authorities should respond when the prohibition is violated. None of the relevant policies or guidelines—including the portions quoted with emphasis above—say that a page created by an undisclosed paid editor must be deleted, or even that every word of the content they wrote must be removed. It depends on the notability of the topic and the merit of the specific content in question—not just on the illicit source of the page or its content. From WP:CORP:
 * Advertising is prohibited as an official Wikipedia policy. Advertising should be removed by following these steps, in order:
 * Clean up per NPOV
 * Erase remaining advertising content from the article
 * Delete the article by listing it at Articles for deletion if no notable content remains. However, if an article contains only blatant advertising, with no other useful content, it may be tagged per Criteria for speedy deletion instead.
 * And from WP:G11 within WP:CSD:
 * If a subject is notable and the content could plausibly be replaced with text that complies with neutral point of view, this is preferable to deletion.
 * That is what I am advocating, and trying to accomplish. —Syrenka V (talk) 05:08, 7 October 2017 (UTC)
 * Incidentally, I agree that AfDs cannot override policy (or guidelines, except insofar as the guidelines themselves authorize this via their "commonsense exceptions" clause). I have myself made this point in other AfDs against attempts to justify counterintuitive interpretations of certain guidelines. Even with relisting, the limited, short-term consensus of AfDs barely qualifies as consensus at all by the standards of WP:CONSENSUS. That is one reason why (with a few exceptions like WP:BLP) a very strong consensus for deletion in an AfD is needed to foreclose the ongoing consensus resulting from page editing, and a "no consensus" close results in the page being kept.
 * —Syrenka V (talk) 05:26, 7 October 2017 (UTC)


 * Delete unless rewritten from scratch to remove adverts/promotional nonsense. - F ASTILY   06:24, 6 October 2017 (UTC)
 * (1) it's been rewritten already (2) what "promotional nonsense"? Sionk (talk) 16:15, 6 October 2017 (UTC)


 * Delete -Some (most ?) of the sources such as the Express are simply parroting press releases but others such as The Guardian demand more scrutiny. Here, much is made of the effectiveness or otherwise of the app but most of the text is actually about the cost of shopping and again there seems to be heavy reliance on the website's own blurb. I don't see notability here, I am not convinced of the independence of the refs, I see no balancing text to the company sales speak - it is a relentless promotional vehicle for a website and doesn't belong here.  Velella  Velella Talk  21:53, 6 October 2017 (UTC)
 * Editors can't just look at an article and claim that the sources in the article are not sufficient for notability. That is not how notability is defined at WP:N, including WP:N.  In particular, this topic includes sources at Google scholar.  As for balancing text, multiple editors have objected to one sentence in the article, including myself, and if you will read the entire discussion here, you will find that myself and another editor have each written versions of the article without that sentence.  Unscintillating (talk) 15:37, 7 October 2017 (UTC)


 * Comment - To add onto the previously deleted posted Terms of Use, I also want to make clear the Terms of Use make clear with the following: Terms of Use and Policies – You adhere to the below Terms of Use and to the applicable community policies when you visit our sites or participate in our communities. Under the following conditions....You take responsibility for your edits (since we only host your content). This means it is important that you use caution when posting content. We reserve the right to exercise our enforcement discretion with respect to the above terms.. If we acknowledge the paid editing which the Keep votes haven't refuted or denied, then we can only see facts as they are : Undisclosed laid editing occurred in contrary to the necessary process. To now quote WP:GNG: A topic is presumed notable if it not excluded under the WP:What Wikipedia is not policy....and are not outside the scope of Wikipedia. This is not a guarantee that a topic will necessarily be handled as a separate, stand-alone page.". I can't imagine at any time, that we would ever advance a general Notability guideline instead of our own established Terms of Use, which themselves are clear on the process here. Also, see WP:Deletion policy:
 * 'The Wikipedia deletion policy describes how pages that do not meet the relevant criteria for content of the encyclopedia are identified and removed from Wikipedia....Deletion:Any other content not suitable for an encyclopedia.  therefore a Terms of Use violation, no matter if someone else contributed, is still a violation and it's our responsibility to take action. Ⓩⓟⓟⓘⓧ Talk 20:10, 7 October 2017 (UTC)
 * Conceding that I have no idea what the evidence of this paid editing allegation is: in summary, you want a WP:DEL14 deletion for a problem that no longer exists, and you can't cite relevant text from WP:NOT? And even then, why are you rejecting a "clean-room rewrite"?  Unscintillating (talk) 21:05, 7 October 2017 (UTC)


 * Protect. I would not argue that this topic is not notable. However, I think there is a serious need for protection of articles which have a history like this one, and perhaps a general investigation into paid editing (unless there is one already going on that I don't know about). I see the amount of spam increasing daily, and I see firms openly advertising for people to write their wikipedia articles. For example, on the Upwork website, "Seeking to find someone who can build a Wikipedia a page. Qualifications: 1. Can work under pressure 2. Excellent communication skills 3. Extensive background in wikipedia page building", and "Wiki Admin or Editor required". Unfortunately I can't find out who the prospective employer is without applying for and getting the job and I'm not going to compromise my position by doing so. That means I also can't track down the editors who are doing the spamming. Deb (talk) 10:34, 8 October 2017 (UTC)
 * I endorse protection of the page after rewrite. My arguments in favor of keeping the page (after rewrite—'s or my own), on the basis of notability of the topic, should not be read as sympathy for allowing further contributions by the undisclosed paid editors who created the problematic versions.
 * —Syrenka V (talk) 19:19, 8 October 2017 (UTC)


 * The above discussion is preserved as an archive of the debate. Please do not modify it. Subsequent comments should be made on the appropriate discussion page (such as the article's talk page or in a deletion review). No further edits should be made to this page.