Doom Wiki:Criteria for speedy deletion

This page sets out the speedy deletion policy of the Doom Wiki, explaining how to request or deal with speedy deletion. This page does not explain copyright or licensing issues; for such information, please see Doom Wiki:Copyrights.

The criteria for speedy deletion specify the only cases in which administrators have broad consensus support to, at their discretion, bypass deletion discussions and immediately delete files or pages, which does not mean that administrators are compelled to delete it if there are circumstances that provide for a simple better solution. They cover only the cases specified in the rules below.

Administrators should take care not to speedy delete pages or media except in the most obvious cases. If a page has survived a prior deletion discussion, it should not be speedy deleted except for newly discovered issues. Contributors sometimes create pages over several edits, so administrators should avoid deleting a page that appears incomplete too soon after its creation.

Creators and major contributors of pages and files should be warned of a speedy deletion nomination; if you tagged any content for speedy deletion, be sure to notify its creator.

To tag a page for speedy deletion, you may use Template:SpeedyDelete, using the number assigned to each enumerated item below as the first argument. The article will then appear in the category.

1. Renamed or duplicate category

 * Categories that are renamed, or those that duplicate an existing, may be redirected to the new category, or deleted.

2. Improperly named category

 * Improperly named categories, or categories that violates the basic naming conventions, may be speedily deleted.

3. Copyright violation

 * Content is apparently a copyright violation, with no clear evidence of compatible licensing being issued by the copyright holder. Repeated uploading of such material may lead to the uploading user's account being temporarily or permanently blocked. Such material represents a real and immediate legal liability for stakeholders in the underlying infrastructure that supports this project.

4. Duplicate file

 * The file is an exact or scaled-down duplicate of an older existing file. The generally accepted rule is to delete the newer duplicate, but that may not always be the case. Note that for very large files, it may be acceptable to have a scaled-down duplicate for accessibility reasons.

5. Duplicate template

 * A recently created template that duplicates an existing older template.

6. User requested deletion in own user space

 * User requested deletion of their own user page or user-subpage. User pages that are blanked by the user may also be deleted under this criterion.

7. User page of non-existent user

 * User space of non-existent user. Redirects may be created (and protected) for those user names of which the account was renamed.

8. Inappropriate use of user pages

 * Inappropriate use of user pages. These include user pages that contain purely advertising or promotional material, or those that are created with the intention of harassment or attack. Those that contain gibberish or unrecognizable content may also be deleted under this criterion.

9. Test page or accidental creation

 * Page contains redundant content that was previously used for testing, or was accidentally created,

10. Non-sense or no valid content

 * Page contains only content that is gibberish or nothing meaningful. This may include text or messages placed in talk pages (which have no further history) that doesn't help or refer to the related page.

11. Unused, implausible, or broken redirect

 * Page is an unused and implausible redirect, or a redirect that is dependent on deleted or non-existent content. Unused talk page redirects that were created as a result of a page move, or cross-namespace redirects, may also be deleted under this criteria.

12. Spam, vandalism, threat, or attack

 * Content that is posted with the intention of advertising external goods or services, enhancing SEO of other websites, causing damage, or with the intention of threatening, harassing, or attacking another person or user. Users that commit such acts are subjected to their accounts being temporarily or permanently blocked, depending on the severity of the content. Content posted with the intention of creating/spreading hoaxes may also be deleted under this criteria.

13. Recreation of content previously deleted per consensus

 * Page or file matches content that was previously deleted per community consensus. Repeated recreation of such content may lead to the user's account being blocked. The author or uploader may ask the deleting administrator to restore the file or article.

14. Temporary deletion for history cleaning or revision suppression

 * Content temporarily deleted to remove specific revisions containing vandalism, threats/attacks, or personal information. Content may also be temporarily deleted to perform a history merge or split.

15. Uncontroversial maintenance

 * Content temporarily deleted to make way for page move, or other uncontroversial maintenance tasks that require temporary or permanent deletion.

16. Personality rights issue

 * An article, photograph, or other media which contains personally identifiable information or infringes on personality rights of private individuals must be deleted at that person's request. Similar to copyright violations, personality rights issues represent a legal liability to the wiki infrastructure's stakeholders.