- This looks more like a spam than a list of reliable sources. Most of these links are included in the list of reliable sources maintained by
Korpalo. Some other links are before 2019 (for example,
World Bank which is the second link of your list). Some other are written by nationals of North Macedonia that cannot be included in the list according to the methodology of
RfC, (for example,
North Macedonia Travel Guide 2020 p.5). You include multiple references to Macedonian denar in the same document multiple times to make your list look loooooonger (for example
OECD Competitiveness and Private Sector Development Competitiveness in South East Europe 2021 p.191, and
OECD Competitiveness and Private Sector Development Competitiveness in South East Europe 2021 p.1449). You report 19 times the same link from Unicef although Macedonian denar is not mentioned at all in the text. Macedonian denar is ONLY in the list of currencies, but as you may know, this list is automatically taken from a database. Multiple pages of Unicef with no reference to Macedonian denar have no value. One of them is enough, and perhaps even that currency list doesn't indicate that Unicef uses Macedonian denar, since these codes are defined by IT companies (like the currency codes of
IBM Emptoris Sourcing which are used by many applications), and Unicef has no control over it. It's like you report random pages that use google maps to make a point that the country is called North Macedonia; the correct interpretation is that Google uses the name North Macedonia, all the other pages have no control over it. Since you include links from Businesses, I found some other links from businesses published by NASDAQ
link1
link2, Avaron Emerging Europe Fund
PROSPECTUS, Liberty Adriatic
link, Invest in See
link, BDO Australia
link, TITAN Global
link.
Korpalo Thanks for the great work you have done. I carefully checked the links from IMF and the Worldbank, and they should be added it in the list of reliable sources you maintain. Perhaps there are some more links that should be added. Ο Ροζ Πάνθηρας(
talk)
- That World Bank source calls the country Republic of North Macedonia but still calls the currency Macedonian denar so it is valid. The travel guide author is presumably Macedonian (just noted that above), though the publisher is not. So, if you wish to exclude it feel free. I'll then note that your BDO source is also presumably written by a Macedonian, so this becomes tedious. And yes I listed each reference in each source, as you point out with the OECD example. Korpalo is also counting each hit as I understand, not each source. Regarding the UNICEF pages, it lists Macedonian denar on each one, so I included them.
- You found more links... me too:
NASDAQ,
NASDAQ,
NASDAQ,
Lute Credit,
S&P Global,
S&P Global, and more hits that I've just found from this site. Or perhaps you'll try to dismiss these as "spam". Just because I'm finding a lot doesn't make it spam.
- Do you now realize that we could keep doing this indefinitely? I will continue to find hits for "Macedonian denar" and perhaps the three of you on the opposing side will continue to find hits for your preferred term. No clear change in preference from Macedonian denar to "North" will be proven. So, I'll propose again that we simply add the alternate name to the lead sentence. --
Local hero
talk
14:47, 9 August 2022 (UTC)
- No, OF COURSE, I don't count every hit, every page I report may have more than one results of "XYZ" but are reported only once. I don't report more than one times pages/documents that may be found in different formats. For example, I will report
THIS,
BUT NOT THIS and
NOT THIS EITHER. In this case I report ONLY the source because the text is identical. Another example, I report
THIS,
BUT NOT THIS because they are the same.
- I don't think the slides of BDO (from Ο Ροζ Πάνθηρας) is reliable source. I didn't included it in the list. Sorry for that Ο Ροζ Πάνθηρας. The CNET links from Local hero don't show anything related to denar to me. Is CNET a reliable source? I don't think so. The boundaries of what is a reliable source are flexible, but those two I would doubt are reliable.
- We cannot report a menu where you choose the currency, because this is not always/necessarily an option of the publisher rather than an option of the company that provides the software. All the Unicef sources you reported are essentially one single source, and in my opinion we should not go to this direction of unreliable sources, because the name of the currency in the menu is chosen by an external company instead of Unicef. Unicef is a reliable source but not the external company that makes the menu.
- Did you notice that the sources
Moore Stephens and
World Bank Moore Stephens are from a company based in Skopje, North Macedonia (www.moore.mk)? Did you notice that
World Bank is the same with the first source of Moore (DUPLICATE SOURCE)? The government of North Macedonia is involved in
Grant Thornton too. All these documents are biased. In
World Bank p.21, there is no publication date and the country is called Macedonia on the first slide. The CNET links don't show anything related to denar to me. Is CNET a reliable source?
- I didn't check all your sources, but most of those I checked are SPAM. I will really appreciate if you can DOUBLE-CHECK all the sources you report, DON'T REPORT DUPLICATES, DELETE all the sources of your list that I have already added in the list of reliable sources, and then I am happy to include all your CORRECT sources in the list of reliable sources. If there is any doubt whether a source is okay or not, you are more than welcome to ask. Thanks for your help.
Korpalo (
talk) — Preceding
undated comment added
20:37, 9 August 2022 (UTC)
- CNET is considered
generally reliable. If you want to make a donation to UNICEF with the Macedonian currency, it is called Macedonian denars, that's really the bottom line. If you want to consider all of those as one example, fine. I have included no spam and I also have yet to go through your North Macedonian findings to confirm those. I'll go back through and explain why each one is valid and if it's not I'll remove it from my list.
- You seem to avoid my main question here and prefer to go the route of hunting for links endlessly. The three of you are quick to dismiss my findings, but nonetheless you can see there are plenty of sources for Macedonian denar. Thus, why can we not just add "North Macedonian denar" to the lead sentence as an alternate name? --
Local hero
talk
21:32, 9 August 2022 (UTC)
- Well, all the sources of CNET are about applications and Macedonian denar or dinar is reported under "developer's description". The developer of an app is not a reliable source. Nope, we cannot include the menu with the currency that shows up in every website that you can pay in different currencies. Otherwise, we would have to explore millions/thousands of websites (that offer payment in MKD) although all of them go under the umbrella of a limited number of software options, which would not add any value to our research. I would prefer to focus more on the quality of the sources we provide rather than trying to include some potentially unreliable sources. This will allows us to have a correct conclusion. Thanks for your contribution.
Korpalo (
talk) — Preceding
undated comment added
22:28, 9 August 2022 (UTC)
-
Local hero You are trying to cheat by reporting duplicated documents, old documents, and links that do not report anything about denar in a way to enlarge your spam list
- Macedonian denar in the CIA links refer to the past,
CIA the World Factbook; North Macedonia country profile
CIA The World Factbook, and this is clear from sentences such as note: data are in 2017 dollars; Macedonia has a large informal sector that may not be reflected in these data, which use the old name.
- The
Treasury.gov link doesn't include any Macedonian denar, only Rep. of N Macedonia-Dinar.
- The links of
US adult Passport renewal and
US child Passport renewal don't have a publication date and the name of the country is not used to indicate that is after 12.02.2019.
-
US Embassy Immigrant visa interview, and
US Dept of State travel are the same.
-
US Dept of State; 2020 Country Reports on Human Rights Practices: North Macedonia and
US Dept of State Human Rights Report; 2020 or later are the same.
- In
Overseas earnings thresholds for Plan 1 student loans, 2022-23; UK, the country is the Former Yugoslav Republic of Macedonia, which indicates not update.
-
NASDAQ, glossary for MKD - Macedonian denar does not have a publication or the name of the country reported.
-
Financial Times; 20 Apr 2020 uses the name Macedonia for the country and the data are from 2018 and 2019; not evidence that is up-to-date.
-
Lute Credit prospectus, p.10; country North Macedonia, currency Macedonian denar, reports mixed Macedonian denar and North Macedonian denar
- From the 6 links of S&P Global, only 1 is valid (number 11). I don't see anything about denar in number 10, and number 12, 13, 14, 15 does not have any result of "North Macedonia", indicating that the document is old or not up-to-date. The copyright 2022 is a different thing that the day the text was written.
- From the Globe and Mail list, they are all the same comparing MKD with USD, GBP, and EUR. Of course, we can generate 1000 links for the same.
The Globe and Mail; Jan 2020 refers to data of 2019 and 2019, and in that case Macedonian denar is expected to be used.
- per
Korpalo for all the 8 links of CNET, developer's description is not reliable source, and in addition to that, there is no evidence that the application was developed/updated after renaming the country to North Macedonia
- Links with a list of currencies such as
Sandia.gov is not reliable source, and all the 19 links of United Nations crisis relief.
- 8 links of CNET + 19 links of the currency list = 27 links of clear spam
- In response to your comment in book
North Macedonia Travel Guide 2020 p.5 (author is likely Macedonian; publisher is not Macedonian) I will add here what is online:
North Macedonia Travel Guide 2020 will help you plan your trip to this beautiful country in the Balkans. The guide book contains up to the date information about local cuisine, transportation, interesting places to visit, accomodation options, security and the history of North Macedonia. Written by a native who has tons of useful knowledge, North Macedonia Travel Guide 2020 is a handy and useful passport to the best in North Macedonia!
- Do you still think the author is not from North Macedonia and Google books report the author as a native? Should we trust you or Google books? — Preceding
unsigned comment added by
Ο Ροζ Πάνθηρας (
talk •
contribs)
07:46, 10 August 2022 (UTC)
- Most of the remaining and valid links of your list are already included in the list of reliable sources maintained by
Korpalo. If you think there is some link that is valid, with publication date, and comes from a reliable source, please add it here to make the addition to the list of reliable sources easier. We cannot go every day through your whole spam list to see if there is any valuable links that we should consider. I spend enough time every day just reading your links, and please respect the time spent by
Korpalo to update the list of reliable sources with your links. Ο Ροζ Πάνθηρας(
talk)
- The CIA World Factbook North Macedonia country page was “last updated: Aug 02, 2022”. Whether they choose to update exchange rates or not, the page is considered updated. The exchange rates page has the country name “North Macedonia” and the currency as “Macedonian denars”. Thus, both links are valid. You’re right about treasury.gov, removed it.
- The US Embassy in North Macedonia is in the heading of the passport application pages. There is no date given otherwise, but this is the page individuals will find when seeking to apply for a passport and, within it, they are told that they can pay in “Macedonian denars”.
- Fixed the visa interview and human rights duplicates, thanks.
- Regarding UK student loans page, this may surprise you but not everyone cared to update the country name to “North Macedonia” everywhere. Yes, you can still find “Macedonia” and “FYROM” in places in 2022. This is one such example. Additionally, the currency is shown as “Macedonian denar”, so it’s valid here.
- Not sure why you would expect a date on the NASDAQ glossary. The webpage is clearly not an archive, it is available to anyone searching the active NASDAQ glossary.
- The Financial Times page is for the year-ended 2019. Again, whether or not they choose to update the country name is on them. The fact of the matter is this 2019 report, published in April 2020, uses “Macedonian denar”.
- The years for the S&P Global ones are literally in the page headers. For #10, sorry it was the wrong link, fixed.
- Not sure why it’s wrong to include each different page from the Globe and Mail. The name change occurred in the beginning of 2019 FYI.
- The applications from CNET have dates given.
- Sandia.gov is a US govt site, it’s reliable.
- I’ll de-number the North Macedonia Travel Guide 2020. Thank you. --
Local hero
talk
19:01, 10 August 2022 (UTC)
- Local hero, I reviewed all the sources you reported, and updated the list of reliable sources, for every source I added a comment to say ADDED or to explain the reason that was not added. I reviewed the list without having the most recent edits of you because reviewing took me days and it was hard to get every update of you. In the beginning of the list of reliable sources, I add an explanation of the criteria for adding a source in the list. If you think I have missed a NEW document, for which there is no explanation in this list, and only if you are absolutely sure that the source fulfils the criteria, then I will be happy to include your source in the list of reliable sources. But make sure that you don't give me spam.
- International organizations:
- (ADDED)
World Bank; uses "North Macedonia" as country name and "Macedonian denar" as currency name
- (Date Dec 20, 2018)
World Bank; prepared by the Independent Evaluation Group (IEG) of the World Bank Group; uses "North Macedonia" and "Macedonian denar"
- (ADDED)
World Bank p.21; country name Rep. of North Macedonia, currency name Macedonian denars
- (ADDED)
World Bank; 6 March 2019; country name North Macedonia, currency name Macedonian denars
- (ADDED)
World Bank; country metadata shows North Macedonia with Macedonian denar currency
- (ADDED)
World Bank p.5; 5 Nov 2019, country North Macedonia, currency Macedonian denar
- (ADDED)
World Bank p.21; country Republic of North Macedonia, currency Macedonian denar
- (ADDED)
World Bank p.ix and p.55; country name North Macedonia, currency Macedonian denar
- (ADDED)
World Bank p.2,3,49; country Republic of North Macedonia, currency Macedonian denar
- (ADDED)
World Bank 22 Aug 2019; country Republic of North Macedonia, currency Macedonian denar
- (ADDED)
World Bank p.ii,35; 17 Nov 2020; country Republic of North Macedonia, currency Macedonian denar
- (ADDED)
International Monetary Fund; 28 Jan 2022; Special Data Dissemination Standard Plus Exchange Rates
- (ADDED)
International Monetary Fund; country North Macedonia, click "i" for Macedonian currency info ("Macedonian denar")
- (ADDED)
International Monetary Fund
[17]
[18]
[19]; 11 July 2022; Technical Assistance Report (download file for "Macedonian denar")
- (ADDED)
International Monetary Fund; Jan 2022; Special Data Dissemination Standard Plus International investment position
- (ADDED)
International Monetary Fund; Jan 2022; Special Data Dissemination Standard Plus Depository corporations survey
- (ADDED)
International Monetary Fund; Jan 2022; Special Data Dissemination Standard Plus Central bank survey
- (ADDED)
International Monetary Fund; The Great Lockdown p.118; Apr 2020
- (ADDED)
International Monetary Fund; Jan 2022; Special Data Dissemination Standard Plus Coordinated Direct Investment Survey
- (No results found)
International Monetary Fund; April 2020; Request For Purchase Under The Rapid Financing Instrument
- (ADDED)
International Monetary Fund; April 2021; country North Macedonia, currency Macedonian denar
- (No results found)
International Monetary Fund; Jan 2022; Special Data Dissemination Standard Plus National Accounts
- (ADDED)
International Monetary Fund; Oct 2019; Global Manufacturing Downturn, Rising Trade Barriers; North Macedonia, Macedonian denar
- (ADDED)
International Monetary Fund; Oct 2020; A Long and Difficult Ascent; North Macedonia, Macedonian denar
- (ADDED)
Food and Agriculture Organization of the United Nations Agro-ecological atlas of the Republic of North Macedonia p.v; 23 Jan 2020
- (16.11.2020 is the date on the first page, but Macedonian denar is reported in the end of the document and the date there is 16.08.2005, Macedonia or North Macedonia is not reported)
European Central Bank 16 Nov 2020
- (At the bottom it reports a Macedonian contributor "Contributor: Milena Perchinkova milena.perchinkova@mba.mk")
European Banking Federation; country North Macedonia, currency Macedonian denar
- (ADDED)
European Bank for Reconstruction and Development; country North Macedonia, currency Macedonian denar
- (Duplicated link: same with the link below)
OECD North Macedonia profile, currency is Macedonian denar
- (ADDED)
OECD Competitiveness and Private Sector Development Competitiveness in South East Europe 2021 p.191,1449
- (UN and any other webpage/business/organization don't intentionally choose the currency drop-down menu that shows the currencty for each country, the IBM source confirms that there are some default values determined by external companies, reporting the
IBM source is sufficient)
United Nations crisis relief,
United Nations crisis relief,
United Nations crisis relief,
United Nations crisis relief,
United Nations crisis relief,
United Nations crisis relief,
United Nations crisis relief,
United Nations crisis relief,
United Nations crisis relief,
United Nations crisis relief,
United Nations crisis relief,
United Nations crisis relief,
United Nations crisis relief,
United Nations crisis relief,
United Nations crisis relief,
United Nations crisis relief,
United Nations crisis relief,
United Nations crisis relief,
United Nations crisis relief
-
- Foreign governments
- (ADDED)
UK.gov
- (ADDED)
Bank of Albania
- (ADDED)
Bank of Lithuania
- (ADDED)
Bank of Moldova
- (ADDED)
Bank of Slovenia
- (No results found)
Treasury.gov; 19 Oct 2020
- (The document is updated, but Macedonian denar is used only in historical context confirmed by the dates)
CIA the World Factbook; North Macedonia country profile
- (ADDED)
PrivacyShield.gov
- (ADDED)
US Dept of State
[20]; 2020 Country Reports on Human Rights Practices: North Macedonia
- (ADDED)
US Embassy Information on Disposition of Remains; April 2020
- (Nothing indicates the page was updated after 2019, the name North Macedonia on the heading sentence is stable for the whole webpage)
US adult Passport renewal
- Nothing indicates the page was updated after 2019, the name North Macedonia on the heading sentence is stable for the whole webpage)
US child Passport renewal
- (ADDED)
US Ambassadors Fund for Cultural Preservation; 2022
- The document is updated, but Macedonian denar is used only in historical context confirmed by the dates)
CIA The World Factbook Exchange Rates; country is North Macedonia, currency is Macedonian denars
- (Currency drop-down menus are not reliable source per UN explanation)
Sandia.gov
- (ADDED)
US Embassy
[21] Immigrant visa interview
- (ADDED)
US Embassy; US govt RFQ
- (ADDED)
US Embassy; US govt RFQ
- (ADDED)
Securities and Exchange Commission; 31 Dec 2020
- (ADDED)
Canada.gov; North Macedonia travel advice
- (The country is reported only as Macedonia (Former Yugoslav Republic))
Overseas earnings thresholds for Plan 1 student loans, 2022-23; UK
-
- Business
- (ADDED)
IBM Emptoris Sourcing
- (Neither publication date nor the country name is reported)
NASDAQ, glossary for MKD - Macedonian denar
- (ADDED)
NASDAQ; North Macedonia updated Mar 2019
- (ADDED)
NASDAQ; North Macedonia updated Apr 2020
- (ADDED)
NASDAQ; North Macedonia updated Mar 2019
- (The country is reported as Macedonia)
Financial Times; 20 Apr 2020
- (borderline, ADDED)
Coinbase
- (Neither publication date nor the country name is reported)
BNP Paribas (website is active)
- (ADDED, mixed findings of Macedonian denar and North Macedonian denar)
Lute Credit prospectus, p.10; country North Macedonia, currency Macedonian denar
- (ADDDED)
S&P Global; North Macedonia's Komercijalna Banka expects profit drop amid COVID-19 pandemic; 2 Feb 2021
- (ADDED)
S&P Global; North Macedonia's central bank cancels Eurostandard Banka's license; 13 Aug 2020
- (ADDED)
S&P Global; Methodology Updates CSA 2021; 9 hits for Macedonian denar
- (ADDED)
S&P Global; MNX Test Company; 2022
- (ADDED)
S&P Global; BNK Test Company; 2022
- (ADDED)
S&P Global; CSV Test Company; 2022
- (Real-time update of currency rates retrieved by external company)
The Globe and Mail
[22]; Euro/Macedonian Denar
- (Reference to old data)
The Globe and Mail; Jan 2020
- (Real-time update of currency rates retrieved by external company)
The Globe and Mail
[23]; Macedonian Denar/U.S. Dollar
- (Real-time update of currency rates retrieved by external company)
The Globe and Mail
[24]; Macedonian Denar/British Pound
- (Developer's Description is not a reliable source)
CNET
[25]; 26 Jul 2020 application
- (Developer's Description is not a reliable source)
CNET; 8 Aug 2020 application
- (Developer's Description is not a reliable source)
CNET; 22 June 2020 application
- (Developer's Description is not a reliable source)
CNET; 22 June 2020 application
- (Developer's Description is not a reliable source)
CNET; 22 June 2020 application
- (Developer's Description is not a reliable source)
CNET; 4 Jan 2020 application
- (Developer's Description is not a reliable source)
CNET; 29 Sep 2020 application
- (Developer's Description is not a reliable source)
CNET; 16 July 2020 application
- (ADDED)
BTI Transformation Index country profile;
insource
- (ADDED)
The Global Economy;
insource
-
- Other Books
- (No preview available)
Political Handbook of the World 2020-2021 (SAGE Publishing) p.1239
- (Macedonian denar used only once in clear historical context, confirmed by the only 7 results of North Macedonia and 99 results of Macedonia used in references to the past)
Dark Finance (Stanford University Press)
- (ADDED)
Foreign Direct Investment in the Successor States of Yugoslavia (Springer International Publishing) p.164
- (ADDED)
Rajasthan PSC (RPSC) - Public Relations Officer (PRO) 2020 p.346
- (The only result is "Macedonia Skopje Macedonian Denar Macedonian", which can be anything, e.g., Country, Capital, Nationality, Currency, Language, or it can be reference to historical context.)
General Knowledge 2020-Competitive Exam Book 2021 p.466
- (ADDED)
The Military Balance 2021 The International Institute for Strategic Studies (IISS) p.48
- (ADDED)
CBSE Junior Assistant 2020 p.268
- (ADDED)
Young People and the Belt and Road:Opportunities and Challenges in Central and Eastern Europe p.18
- (ADDED)
BCECEB Bihar AMIN 2020 p.262
- (ADDED)
Geopolitical Risk, Sustainability and "Cross-Border Spillovers" in Emerging Markets, Volume II (Palgrave Macmillan) p.68
- (ADDED)
NABARD Assistant Manager (Grade A & B) Prelims Examination (per preview, country is North Macedonia, currency is Macedonian Denar)
- (ADDED)
RBI Officer Grade B (Phase 1) Vol -1 2021 p.477 (post-Prespa agreement)
- (The authors is from North Macedonia)
Managing Diabetes in Low Income Countries (Springer International Publishing) p.xii (author is likely Macedonian; publisher is not Macedonian)
- (The authors is from North Macedonia)
North Macedonia Travel Guide 2020 p.5 (author is Macedonian; publisher is not Macedonian but probably did not perform much review)
-
- Other
- (ADDED)
IPN Press Agency; Moldovan;
insource
- (Clear historical context "I’ve collected from the many countries I’ve visited?")
The Christian Post;
insource
- (ADDED)
World Atlas;
insource
- (I cannot open the link)
Xinhua News Agency; North Macedonia country, Macedonian denars
- (Currency drop-down menus are not reliable source per UN explanation)
USA Swimming (currency drop-down)
- (Currency drop-down menus are not reliable source per UN explanation)
Common Sense Media (currency drop-down)
- (Currency drop-down menus are not reliable source per UN explanation)
The Economist (currency drop-down)
- (The authors is from North Macedonia, confirmed by linkedin)
SEE News (author is likely Macedonian; site is not Macedonian)
-
- International firms with local presence in N. Macedonia
- (Based in North Macedonia against methodology used by RfC 2019)
World Bank audit report by Moore Stephens
- (Based in North Macedonia against methodology used by RfC 2019)
Grant Thornton audit report, p.42,43,44
- (Based in North Macedonia against methodology used by RfC 2019)
World Bank Moore Stephens p.9,10
- (Based in North Macedonia against methodology used by RfC 2019)
Moore Stephens p.9,10,17
- (Based in North Macedonia against methodology used by RfC 2019)
USAID, report by Macedonian team
-
Korpalo (
talk)
20:44, 11 August 2022 (UTC)
- Comment
Local hero enough with your spam list. 80% of your links violate the methodology of the reliable sources' list. You added the link
Deutsche Bundesbank “legal currency: Macedonian denar”; 22 July 2022, which clarifies with the best possible way North Macedonia denar (until 11 February 2019: Macedonian denar) that the currency was called Macedonian denar and the change took effect only after the new name of the country. I should remind two main problems:
Local hero should read the documents s/he adds in the list to avoid making it a spam list (Don't include the document of Deutsche Bundesbank as evidence of Macedonian denar, this document is the best possible evidence that the currency was called Macedonian denar but not anymore), and we should all be very careful with the links added in the list of reliable sources. Any reference to data before 2019 are expected to use "Macedonian denar" as this was the currency. Any reference of a mix of old and new data in the same page/sentence isn't evidence that Macedonian denar is used. It's only evidence that Macedonian denar WAS the common name of the currency before 2019. I am fine with including links of not very clear cases, but the links in the list of reliable source should present the information in a meaningful scientific way. Another aspect is that the first North Macedonian denar was released in 2020. If we want to be very precise and strict and improve the quality of the list, we should take into account that parameter too.
Local hero most of the links you added in the last 24 hours don't have a publication date, refer to data from the past, or refer to mixed data. If you keep doing that, I will stop looking at your links. The more random links you add the more evidence you provide that you have run out of links, and you provide random links to enlarge your "spam list", which adds no value, and reduces your reputation. Ο Ροζ Πάνθηρας(
talk)
- It shouldn't surprise anyone if either of the single-purpose accounts try to dismiss ~130+ links. We have yet to receive input from non-Greek (all 3 supporters) and non-Macedonian (the one opposer) editors. The Deutsche Bundesbank link clearly states "Macedonian denar" and "North Macedonia denar"; *both* are evidence against the proposed move here. You are essentially trying to narrow the goalposts here by now suggesting to exclude a full year of the new-name-period (2019) and claiming a "mixed data" issue. The solid majority of what I've provided name the country "North Macedonia" or provide a publication date 2019 or later. Whether some sites did or did not update how they term the denar, the fact of the matter is *they are using "Macedonian denar" today in 2022* (in what I've provided); thus, evidence against the proposed move here. --
Local hero
talk
14:15, 11 August 2022 (UTC)
- Your ~130+ links is an add-only list; you never remove from it, you only add. It's surprising that
Treasury.gov; 19 Oct 2020 is still in your ~130+ spam list (maybe you dismiss that there is no result for Macedonian denar in that source). You still include sources based in North Macedonia that are against the methodology used by
RfC. The list of reliable sources now includes all the valid sources of your list, and I gave you a detailed explanation for those excluded in my ~130+ long list of explanations above. How can you accuse me of dismissing your ~130+ links while I made you a comment for each individual of these ~130+ links? I spent about 10 hours to review them. Who excludes a full year? The Deutsche Bundesbank document says that the name of the currency was Macedonian denar before February 12, 2019, and North Macedonia denar after that date, namely after the day the country was renamed to North Macedonia. I suppose you got confused and you don't try to mislead other users with your untrue statements. Everybody who has eyes can read the
Deutsche Bundesbank source and judge us. Other editors will judge us based on our true reliable sources. Claims are unimportant.
Korpalo (
talk)
21:11, 11 August 2022 (UTC)
- No, I have removed a few duplicates the other used had pointed out, so I have indeed been updating it. I've kept a separate section for the sources based on N. Macedonia-based subsidiaries of international firms, so these can be easily included or excluded.
- Thanks for reviewing the links, I'll go through and see if there are any you missed (I suspect there are several). Then, I'll review your "North Macedonian" ones.
- As I already explained about the Bundesbank source, it provides the legal currency as "Macedonian denar", as "everybody who has eyes" can see. Regardless, the source is *evidence against the proposed move* for which this discussion exists because there is *no mention of North Macedonian denar*. --
Local hero
talk
02:29, 12 August 2022 (UTC)
- Alright regarding my international organizations links, I de-numbered the one WB one that is technically pre-official name change even though it uses "North Macedonia". I removed the two IMF ones you pointed out. You did miss one IMF one and I also added 10 more IMF ones to my list (here are those ones for convenience):
-
World Bank Social Insurance Administration Project; 14 Jan 2020
-
International Monetary Fund; WEO Database Oct 2019
-
International Monetary Fund; World Economic Outlook; Oct 2021
-
International Monetary Fund; Statistical Appendix; Oct 2019
-
International Monetary Fund; Statistical Appendix; Oct 2021
-
International Monetary Fund; World Economic Outlook; Apr 2022
-
International Monetary Fund; World Economic Outlook; Apr 2021
-
International Monetary Fund; Statistical Appendix; Apr 2020
-
International Monetary Fund; World Economic Outlook; Oct 2019
-
International Monetary Fund; World Economic Outlook; Apr 2019
-
International Monetary Fund; World Economic Outlook; Apr 2020
- Regarding the ECB links, you get the "16.08.2005" date from Appendix II; the currencies are listed in Appendix I. The document date is 16 Nov 2020. Valid reference. However, the other does appear to be credited to a Macedonian so I moved it to that section of my list. You missed 15+ ECB links and I added another ECB link (here, for your convenience):
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European Central Bank; 2020 Facts and Figures
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European Central Bank North Macedonia: Small Business Act profile
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Eurostat; European business statistics compilers’ manual for international trade in good statistics - trade by invoicing currency; 2022 edition
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European Central Bank, Value Limits 1 Jan 2022
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European Central Bank, Value Limits 1 Jan 2021
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European Central Bank, Value Limits 1 Jan 2020
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European Central Bank, Euro Exchange (Figure 3), Apr 2022
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European Central Bank, Appendix Exchange Rates (Table 1 and Figure1a-1d), 15 Feb 2022
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European Central Bank, Exchange Rates (click "Full Article"), 2020
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European Central Bank Reference Metadata; “Last update 25 April 2022”
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European Training Foundation; North Macedonia Education Training and Employment Developments 2020
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European Training Foundation; Policies For Human Capital Development North Macedonia
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European Central Bank; 16 Nov 2020; Reporting instructions for the electronic transmission of Short-Term European Paper (STEP) statistics
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European Bank for Reconstruction and Development; country North Macedonia, currency Macedonian denar
- European Central Bank datasets:
[26]
[27]
[28]
[29]
[30], and dozens more (date published unknown, however the ECB does mark pages "discontinued"
example and these are not marked as such)
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World Health Organization copyright WHO 2020, of three authors one is Macedonian
- The OECD links are indeed duplicates. I added the following OECD link to my list (here, for your convenience):
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OECD; 2019 North Macedonia profile
[31]
[32]
- I continue to disagree about the currencies listed at UNICEF and other sites. If I wish to donate to UNICEF, they give me the option of donating in "Macedonian denars", not "North Macedonian denars". We're discussing the use of "North Macedonian denar" compared to the current page title. I'll go through more next. --
Local hero
talk
03:45, 12 August 2022 (UTC)
- Thanks for your sources, I have added all of them with some exceptions: (9) from IMF was already in the list, (1) from ECB says "Contributor: ....@mba.mk" based in North Macedonia, (7,8,9 and 10) from ECBF says the data are from 2010 to 2021 (reference to the past), confirmed by (10) which says "Macedonian denar" when refers to the past, and uses "denar (of North Macedonia) in the table", (11 and 12) form ETF has the same paragraph that reports Macedonian denar, borderline case, I added both, (13) from ECB, Page 27 has a date "2005-06-20" and Page 32 has a date "2005-08-16", Macedonian denar shows up between these pages, (14) from EBRD already included, (36-40) from ECB, none of them reports the country name to help us understand if it's up to date, in (16) from WHO, the second author is from North Macedonia confirmed by linkedin. The OECD link looks like a chapter of book2, but I cannot confirm. I added it in the list of reliable sources.
Korpalo (
talk)
19:30, 13 August 2022 (UTC)
- I removed the duplicate IMF you pointed out, de-numbered the ECB one with a mk email and the one with the 2005 dates (though I didn't see a date for the currency list). Yes you already had EBRD included, apologies. One of the authors of the WHO source is Macedonian but the other two are not, I think that's fair game. The ECBF data begins in 2010 but extends into 2021, as you state, thus it covers our period of scope here. --
Local hero
talk
04:07, 16 August 2022 (UTC)
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