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Cite Unseen/sources/influence

From Meta, a Wikimedia project coordination wiki

This is a list of websites that are influenced by other entities.

Editors are welcomed to update this list accompanied by facts and reasoning in the edit summary.

Template documentation

Use {{CULink}} for source definitions.

Mandatory parameters (must have one of the following):

  • URL (url) that must contain the domain.
    • Example: {{CULink |url=x.com }}URL: x.com
      Global SearchGoogle Search
      enwiki zhwikiDomain Whois
  • URL string (url_str). Can be any part of the URL.
    • Example: {{CULink |url_str=/wiki/ }}URL String: /wiki/

Optional parameters:

  • Author (author).
  • Publisher or publication (pub).
  • Date range (date). Should have one of the comparison operators (=, >, <, >=, <=) plus a date (yyyy or yyyy-MM or yyyy-MM-dd). Comma (,) and semicolon (;) separators are used to represent AND and OR logic, respectively.

Technical details: The reliability categories are applied in the following order: blacklisted > deprecated > generally unreliable > marginally reliable > multi (varied reliability) > generally reliable. When date range rules are present, they always take precedence. Therefore, we encourage rules to be as specific as ever, and always include date ranges if they are part of the source evaluation.

Source lists

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government

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State media and other government sources. This categorization takes into account the direct editorial control the government has on the source. Some public broadcasters and other outlets in which the state does not exercise tight editorial control (such as PBS in the United States) are not included.

US websites

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Canadian websites

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North Korean websites

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Government media outlets:

Mainland China websites

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National government media outlets in mainland China
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Global Times (see WP:GLOBALTIMES):

China Daily (see WP:CHINADAILY, and § Editorial control):

China Media Group:

People's Daily (see WP:人民日报):

Xinhua News Agency (see WP:XINHUA):

State-controlled media outlets:

State government press release:

Local government media outlets in mainland China
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Beijing:

Tianjin:

Hebei:

Shanxi:

Inner Mongolia:

Liaoning:

Jilin:

Heilongjiang:

Shanghai:

Jiangsu:

Zhejiang:

Anhui:

Fujian:

Jiangxi:

Shandong:

Henan:

Hubei:

Hunan:

Guangdong:

Guangxi:

Hainan:

Chongqing:

Sichuan:

Guizhou:

Yunnan:

Tibet:

Shaanxi:

Gansu:

Qinghai:

Ningxia:

Xinjiang:

predatory

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Predatory journals and publishers; these sites charge publication fees to authors without checking articles for quality and legitimacy. This list is derived from Template:Predatory open access source list.

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Articles that have been paid for or otherwise sponsored. As an example, see the sponsored section of the Seattle Times. Depending on the publication, sponsored content may be produced by a third-party.