The Galactic Mapping Project & Historical Archive of Exploration

@Titler: I understand it must feel like a blow right now that systems you are clearly invested in has been given other names by explorers submitting their suggestions to the GMP. I've been around for quite some time now and I believe your case is the very first in the history of the GMP where someone approaches us because of something like this. You have my sympathy and I really hope your enjoyment of exploration will return.

The GMP has always worked on the principle of "first submission" not "first discovered" and there is really no way for us to keep tabs on all exploration 'fanfiction'. For all we know there could be any number of non-english communities out there who has their own naming and mapping projects that we do not know of. But when I come across some interesting discovery on the forums or in other social media I usually try to get in touch with the player and encourage them to submit their findings to the GMP as well. I have done this exactly to try and avoid this kind of situation where parallel and conflicting naming occurs.
 
I have seen several cases where someone posted his POI in another thread first, and then came here and suggested it be added to the GMP while also providing a link to their other post. I've been lurking this thread for more than a year now, and I've never seen any POI added without it being announced here. Even when the GMP staff has found them in other threads, even then they post the POIs here first (as far as I've seen at least). So to me it's clear that this thread is at least de facto the place to suggest POIs for the GMP, not other threads.

Yes, this is how we try to handle it.
 
@ DVHeld: This is mostly between Titler, the organisation whose pilots took his finds (so in all likelihood, they knew they were there), renamed them and posted them here, and the GMP team. Personally, I was only interested in clarifying how things are here, because it was never written down that the rights of submitters are more important here than the rights of the explorers. If that decision is final, then that's good to know. I'm not interested in debating this with you, so if you want to have the last word, feel free.

@ Erimus: There's a suggestion I'd like to make. How about adding a "Submitted by" and a "First discovered by" fields to future entries? (Adding them all retroactively would most likely be too much work.) That way, everyone is given their due credit, and it's handy to know who wrote an entry too, in case you like what somebody wrote and wish to look up more by the author. Plus that might encourage people to post more, instead of discouraging them.
Now, you did say that you only include Commander names "very very rarely", but I'd say that rarity is debatable, as there are a good number of examples of those in descriptions, and a handful in the POI names as well. So it's not like there aren't any precedents.
In my opinion, adding those two entries would be useful for many, and fair to everyone - and probably not a lot of work either.
 
@ DVHeld: This is mostly between Titler, the organisation whose pilots took his finds (so in all likelihood, they knew they were there), renamed them and posted them here, and the GMP team. Personally, I was only interested in clarifying how things are here, because it was never written down that the rights of submitters are more important here than the rights of the explorers. If that decision is final, then that's good to know. I'm not interested in debating this with you, so if you want to have the last word, feel free.

Please note that the GMP requires you to have visited the POI in person.


@ Erimus: There's a suggestion I'd like to make. How about adding a "Submitted by" and a "First discovered by" fields to future entries? (Adding them all retroactively would most likely be too much work.) That way, everyone is given their due credit, and it's handy to know who wrote an entry too, in case you like what somebody wrote and wish to look up more by the author. Plus that might encourage people to post more, instead of discouraging them.
Now, you did say that you only include Commander names "very very rarely", but I'd say that rarity is debatable, as there are a good number of examples of those in descriptions, and a handful in the POI names as well. So it's not like there aren't any precedents.
In my opinion, adding those two entries would be useful for many, and fair to everyone - and probably not a lot of work either.

To me the GMP has always been about encouraging community effort rather than individual glory and thats why we have downplayed the use of individual CMDR names. But I promise we will consider your suggestion.
 
Please note that the GMP requires you to have visited the POI in person.
I know, but when you know the location of something, that hardly matters much. Certainly doesn't take as much effort as finding it did.

To me the GMP has always been about encouraging community effort rather than individual glory and thats why we have downplayed the use of individual CMDR names. But I promise we will consider your suggestion.
Thanks, that's all I can ask for.

As for individual Commander names: well, you say you discourage them, but there are a number of examples where they are obviously there. So I guess it's a murky thing, whether whoever verified the entries at the time thought the names would be relevant enough to make an exception or not. Also, consider this: if you include everyone, that actually plays down the use of individual CMDR names more than just including some select few does. There are no selection criteria then, after all.

Speaking of names, my CMDR name is on the entry for Metztli, but if there is such a rule, I don't think it's important for my name to be there. There's also a small typo, so, could you edit the current "Within the Nereus system is the Earth-Like world; Tranquility. this was first discovered by CMDR Marx in Jul. 3302, shortly after Jaques station was found, and in Oct. 3302, the planet became the first Earth-like world in the galactic core to be settled." to "Within the Nereus system is the Earth-like planet called Tranquility. It was first discovered in July 3302, shortly after Jaques station was found, and in October 3302, it became the first Earth-like world in the galactic core to be settled." please?
 
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Speaking of names, my CMDR name is on the entry for Metztli, but if there is such a rule, I don't think it's important for my name to be there. There's also a small typo, so, could you edit the current "Within the Nereus system is the Earth-Like world; Tranquility. this was first discovered by CMDR Marx in Jul. 3302, shortly after Jaques station was found, and in Oct. 3302, the planet became the first Earth-like world in the galactic core to be settled." to "Within the Nereus system is the Earth-like planet called Tranquility. It was first discovered in July 3302, shortly after Jaques station was found, and in October 3302, it became the first Earth-like world in the galactic core to be settled." please?

Done :)
 
@ DVHeld: the organisation whose pilots took his finds (so in all likelihood, they knew they were there), renamed them and posted them here, and the GMP team. Personally, I was only interested in clarifying how things are here, because it was never written down that the rights of submitters are more important here than the rights of the explorers. If that decision is final, then that's good to know. I'm not interested in debating this with you, so if you want to have the last word, feel free.
I find this characterization unfair. This is fanfiction. If someone took a popular character, let's say, Frodo Baggins, and wrote a fanfiction where he had a son, and named it "Johnny", and then another person made a similar fanfiction where Frodo also had a son, but named "Jimmy", you wouldn't say the second one "renamed the son and overwrote his story". That would be ridiculous to say, because it's not canon. Only canon can overwrite something, and even then people can still have their fan fictions where the overwriting never happened. In this case, there are simply multiple names for a place, and that's not a problem at all, unless you try to make it one by using unfair characterizations of the situation.

Also I think your wording is unfair against the submitter, because you seem to imply only the first discoverer counts as "explorer". We are talking about only explorers here, the argument is only about the explorer that first discovered a place or thing and the one that submitted it here. Seems like you are being disdainful towards the one that's "just a submitter".

It might just be me anyways, that's perceiving the wrong way what you said. If that is the case, I apologise, but I think it also does not require a big stretch on my part to have perceived what you said that way.

At any rate, I completely agree that it's good for this kind of policy to be made explicit, this avoids people getting upset about things like this. A clearer rule or policy is usually perceived as a fairer one.

@ Erimus: There's a suggestion I'd like to make. How about adding a "Submitted by" and a "First discovered by" fields to future entries?
I get that you mean introducing them into the POIs' description or something similar, but that's already there. There are the in-game discovery tags, and EDSM also names the first discoverer for EDSM:
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What you suggest is not necessarily a bad idea (that's for the EDSM/GMP team to decide), but my point is the info is already there if you want it, easily accessible.
 
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Hm, you're right, and it would have been better if I wrote "that the rights of submitters are more important here than the rights of the discoverers". Mind you, there's nothing pejorative about the word submitters: that's what they did.
But still, when you fly somewhere that you know is going to contain something, I don't count that as exploration. Also, note that while there might be cases where somebody comes across something they deem to be worthy of submitting here, without knowing that it was there and already tagged, that wasn't what happened to Titler.
However, with all this, I wonder about one thing: did anybody look up the original submitter, and ask their take on this, and whether they would be fine with renaming the nebulae on EDSM?

Also, you appear to be adamant at calling this fan fiction. Tell me, where is the fiction part? Pretty much every entry describes what's there to be seen in-game, and/or what happened there, and there's very little fiction added. EDSM is far more like a collection of logs than like a platform for fiction. In that case, articles on a game wiki could be counted as works of fiction as well.


It looks like you misunderstood my suggestion. I meant that for noting who entries were written by, and who first discovered the subjects of the POIs. (If that's applicable, of course.) Currently, the former is not accessible, nor is the latter, and both could be quite useful for people. Like I mentioned, you might want to look up other entries by the same author, for example. Not to mention that by including everyone, you'd assign less "individual glory" (as Corbin Moran put it) than the current practice of naming only some people.

What you pointed out with the red arrow, "first discovered for EDSM by", should actually be "first scanned for EDSM by": the site uses this phrase for bodies. Not sure why there's a different phrase used for the systems, perhaps it was a left-over that somebody forgot to change. (If memory serves, there was a time when on bodies, it was "first recorded by"?) See, for example, Earth and Sol.
Although I guess the most accurate would be using "first logged for EDSM by" for both, as technically, you don't scan systems.

Finally, note the introduction (written by Erimus in the beginning, Febr. 2015) to the GMP in the first post. It talks about naming stuff that you've discovered. The submission guideline's explanations also mention "what you discovered", and "what you found". So perhaps over time, the emphasis from the discoverers has shifted to the submitters, but as I mentioned before, it's best to clarify things.
 
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A few personal reflections on the GMP, fiction and persistency...

Obsidian Ant once referred to the GMP as a tapestry for players to play against and tell stories (though I suspect he got it from Erimus first;)).

Anyways, this is also very much the way I see the GMP - as a sort of shared narrative where the narratives of individual explorers and their findings are woven together in a larger common narrative of the findings of the exploration community.

I like to use the word narrative rather than fiction partly because 'narrative' can cover both imaginary and real events - and the text entries of the GMP are all grounded in something that actually took place in this (admittedly fictional) game world: an expedition of players or an individual explorer came across something of note, or some special event took place at the site. I also like the word 'narrative' because a GMP entry are a part of the personal story of the CMDR who found and submitted it as well as a part of a shared story of exploration in the ED galaxy.

As I see it, the GMP offers something that the in-game exploration gameplay doesn´t really do, and that is persistency. When something is added to the GMP it is a sort of permant mark that you may leave on this gameworld, and because the POIs are distributed to other players via EDSM and EDD it gains a significance beyond personal fanfiction. It is not canon (except in a handful of cases where FD has adopted a GMP name), but it IS part of a shared narrative - to a much larger degree than the in-game first-discovered tags that an individual player only see once they arrive in a system.

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@Marx you make a lot of good points and if nothing else this discussion is a good occasion to reflect on some of the ways we do things.

But still, when you fly somewhere that you know is going to contain something, I don't count that as exploration.
Finally, note the introduction (written by Erimus in the beginning, Febr. 2015) to the GMP in the first post. It talks about naming stuff that you've discovered. The submission guideline's explanations also mention "what you discovered", and "what you found". So perhaps over time, the emphasis from the discoverers has shifted to the submitters, but as I mentioned before, it's best to clarify things.

Regarding the quotes above, I think the perceived shift in emphasis from discoverer to submitter is partly due to the increased use and functionality of the 3rd party tools available today (including EDSM). In earlier days you couldn´t really know for certain if a particular system contained something interesting (or even if it where allready explored), and hence subsequent visitors to an interesting system would be as much an explorer as the first person there since they all flew into the unknown on their own accord.
 
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The first person that gets in the EDSM as being the first person in that system has discovered it. They may not have named it if it was something interesting, like say a planetary Nebula, and someone else may have come around and named it later on, but it's still been discovered. Look at most if not all the nations of the world. They probably aren't the names that the first people who discovered that territory called them. Same things as major features, the "Grand Canyon" probably had a name the native Americans called it, yet, despite them being the first to discover it, it's been tagged and named differently.

Yes there are some examples where things such as Ayers Rock went back to Uluru and maybe if a first discoverer of a planetary nebula for example, should maybe have the right to claim the name regardless if it's already named. I don't think many would have a problem with that.

I know I've got a handful of Nebula's that I named, knowing that someone else discovered the system first. I personally wouldn't be upset at all if the actual original discoverer wanted another name for it. I'm completely fine with that...
 
@Titler:I've been around for quite some time now and I believe your case is the very first in the history of the GMP where someone approaches us because of something like this. You have my sympathy and I really hope your enjoyment of exploration will return.
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It's the first time it has happened because the way it works is easy to understand because it is exactly the same as in game. In game you don't get a tag by "discovering" something but by submitting the data in the right place.
 
@ khaos526, about other people renaming things that the inhabitants used for them: that example doesn't apply here, as you're be talking about areas that were already inhabited by the time others "discovered" it. I say quotes because personally, I don't count that as discovery. For example, in more accurate works, Columbus is not credited with discovering America, but with discovering a route from Europe to America. In Elite, nobody has named the unexplored and most importantly, unknown to all procedurally generated stuff. (Well, except those rare cases where Frontier later assigned non-procedural names to them.) If we were to apply your example to Elite, then it would be like a player deciding to want to rename, say, Achenar to Velvetland - and that's explicitly forbidden in the GMP.


@ Corbin Moran: I don't think it was originally intended as a platform for stories and fiction. Reading the introduction again (just to be sure), it talks about naming through-out, says descriptions a couple of times, and neither fiction nor stories are mentioned even once. The only times they are mentioned are in guidelines #2 and #8, but #2 is debatable: I'd say that the meaning behind it is that if a system had some interesting events but contains nothing special, it's still worthy of including. As for #8, that makes clear that all names are unofficial, so "fiction" wasn't the best wording there. In any case, at the start, it was either naming that was more important, or Erimus actually intended it another way but somehow made constant blunders while writing the text - which I strongly doubt.
But if you (plural) decide that you wish the GMP to promote community story-telling instead, then that's fine, but things could use improvements then. Such as including the authors of the entries on the entries themselves, like I suggested - and rewriting the text of the first post to make this direction clear.

However, regardless of intentions, let's take a look at what things are actually used for. Very few entries contain anything that's fiction. The vast majority either describe what can be found there and/or describe what actually happened there in-game; that's non-fiction. About persistency, that's not quite what players use it for: the game itself offers persistency in the form of the first discovery tags. What it does not currently* offer is a way to name your finds so that they are more easy to share them with other people. In the latter, EDDiscovery widened the audience of the GMP, beyond those who'd read the forums or visit the EDSM website. It augmented the stated usage of the GMP very well. (Much as both augment the game itself.)

Now, for the actual usage by players, the names tend to be the most important: it's much easier to remember and refer to a procedurally generated system as "Semotus Beacon" than it is to say "Oevasy SG... uhh... Y d0?" So if somebody's upset that another person took the name of something they first discovered and named it in a way they don't like (this part is important, and probably why there has only been the one such case so far), then saying that they can still include a secondary name and a new part of an entry on EDSM is of little use to them. After all, only the primary name is visible on both EDD and the EDSM search. Only once you click the system are the others included, mostly hidden in the text of the entries that you have to scroll down for, and not displayed in any prominent location.

Personally, I think it's reasonable to give the first discoverers priority on this. It's not like there have been many conflicts so far, just the one. So, it's more of a matter of principle.

Finally, let's not forget that it's called the Galactic Mapping Project.



*: I said currently here because I hope, although don't have high expectations of, that the Codex will include this functionality. However, all we know about it so far is its name. Still, this thread illustrates that there would be real demand for such an in-game feature.
 
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Marx, I can't help but think checking each submission against the in-game tag, and then trying to contact that commander, might at times grind the submission process to a halt unless a default timeout period was also defined. Maintaining a list would help of course.

Part of me wants to say that if a person discovers something, but doesn't submit it, then they obviously didn't think it worth a submission in the first place. In that case, why should they mind if someone else names it later?

In light of this discussion I've been thinking about the systems I've tagged. While some were interesting, the most memorable ones were groups of stars that I had no idea the rarity of, so I didn't bother submitting. Perhaps I should have, maybe some were rare, but c'est la vie. I missed it fair and square. Diamonds are just funny-looking rocks to the untrained eye. A dozen explorers could pass them by. Maybe I've passed some by. If someone else sees the value there that I missed, they should get credit for that.

In case the GMP team might be making a list of commanders who reserve/relinquish naming rights (Marx having already explicitly resereved) on their tags, I'd like to make clear that I freely relinquish them. If I want to name something, I will submit it, and if I don't submit it, any system with the Kuro Kagami tag is fair game, especially if I didn't tag all of the bodies.
 
It's the first time it has happened because the way it works is easy to understand because it is exactly the same as in game. In game you don't get a tag by "discovering" something but by submitting the data in the right place.
This is a great point actually.

@marx:
I ended up writing more than I initially intended, I take no offence if you don't answer or read everything.

Hm, you're right, and it would have been better if I wrote "that the rights of submitters are more important here than the rights of the discoverers". Mind you, there's nothing pejorative about the word submitters: that's what they did.
Then I apologise for interpreting it the wrong way. There is so much salt around this game that I think I get predisposed to assume saltyness.

But still, when you fly somewhere that you know is going to contain something, I don't count that as exploration. Also, note that while there might be cases where somebody comes across something they deem to be worthy of submitting here, without knowing that it was there and already tagged, that wasn't what happened to Titler.
The only case I can think of I would not look in a positive way is trying to purposely "steal" the submission (though it would not really be stealing) by lurking other threads for POIs not submitted to the GMP, without talking to its OP suggesting him to submit the POI here or to do it in his name. That would be rude, I'd say, but still legit. If I were a GMP team member, that's the only case I'd even consider renaming the POI or whatever, though I'd likely wouldn't, just to have simpler and more consistent policies and rules. I guess that would be my "tough luck, should've thought of submitting it here earlier, got enough work as it is" point.

However, with all this, I wonder about one thing: did anybody look up the original submitter, and ask their take on this, and whether they would be fine with renaming the nebulae on EDSM?
I find it a bit rude to ask the GMP staff, who are doing a great job for free, to take on more work than they already do. [Strike that, it's not rude to just ask.] If that is something that upsets you, maybe you could do it. Subscribe to this thread and each time someone suggests a POI, try and look for possible earlier discoverers, contact them, etc. I'm not trying to be rude, but it's extra work and someone would have to do it. There is no such thing as a free lunch, sadly.

Also, you appear to be adamant at calling this fan fiction. Tell me, where is the fiction part? Pretty much every entry describes what's there to be seen in-game, and/or what happened there, and there's very little fiction added. EDSM is far more like a collection of logs than like a platform for fiction. In that case, articles on a game wiki could be counted as works of fiction as well.
Well, fanfiction is exactly that, taking the canon lore of something and adding to it. Fanfiction can be great. It can be collaborative, collectively built, or it can be done separately in an uncoordinated, even incoherent way. Saying this is fanfiction is not looking down on the GMP et al. I love the GMP and the rest of fan-made lore around ED. It's one of the things that I like about the game. And it's partly the idea of the game, to serve as a platform for this kind of stuff. I'm just stating a fact, that does not take anything away from its. The GMP staff agrees

noting who entries were written by, and who first discovered the subjects of the POIs. (If that's applicable, of course.) Currently, the former is not accessible, nor is the latter, and both could be quite useful for people. Like I mentioned, you might want to look up other entries by the same author, for example. Not to mention that by including everyone, you'd assign less "individual glory" (as Corbin Moran put it) than the current practice of naming only some people.
In some cases you might be right (geysers, generation ships, settlements...), but I understand what you suggest is exactly what the GMP staff don't want to do. I mean, if you want your name somewhere, there are lots of other places, like in-game tags, galactic records, POI visitors logs, EDSM tags, your Explorers Hall of Fame, etc. I understand the idea is for the submitters to be anonymous.

What you pointed out with the red arrow, "first discovered for EDSM by", should actually be "first scanned for EDSM by": the site uses this phrase for bodies. Not sure why there's a different phrase used for the systems, perhaps it was a left-over that somebody forgot to change. (If memory serves, there was a time when on bodies, it was "first recorded by"?) See, for example, Earth and Sol.
Although I guess the most accurate would be using "first logged for EDSM by" for both, as technically, you don't scan systems.
It might be a good suggestion, but I guess either way it counts as first-discovery evidence, and my point still stands that EDSM already records and publicly displays that data. That game also does it (though with a different mechanic). My point is the info on first discoverer (in-game and for EDSM) for most cases is there for you to see, if you want it. Why replicate it? Is that replication necessary or valuable enough? That would be a question for the GMP staff to answer.

@ khaos526, about other people renaming things that the inhabitants used for them: that example doesn't apply here, as you're be talking about areas that were already inhabited by the time others "discovered" it. I say quotes because personally, I don't count that as discovery. For example, in more accurate works, Columbus is not credited with discovering America, but with discovering a route from Europe to America. In Elite, nobody has named the unexplored and most importantly, unknown to all procedurally generated stuff. (Well, except those rare cases where Frontier later assigned non-procedural names to them.) If we were to apply your example to Elite, then it would be like a player deciding to want to rename, say, Achenar to Velvetland - and that's explicitly forbidden in the GMP.
You're using a narrow definition of "discovering". One might say the first time I find something I did not know was there also counts as discovering it. I'd suggest, for the sake of clarity, trying to use more precise terms like "first discoverer" etc. Would help to avoid confusion, as we are basically splitting hairs here.

describe what actually happened there in-game; that's non-fiction. About persistency, that's not quite what players use it for: the game itself offers persistency in the form of the first discovery tags. What it does not currently offer is a way to name your finds so that they are more easy to share them with other people.
Yeah, but the game is already fiction. And there is canon and non-canon fanfiction. The names given to POIs in the GMP are not part of the canon (exceptions apply), they are technically fanfiction, as little that added narrative may be. Again, that does not mean it's inferior in some way just because of being fanfiction.

if somebody's upset that another person took the name of something they first discovered and named it in a way they don't like (this part is important, and probably why there has only been the one such case so far), then saying that they can still include a secondary name and a new part of an entry on EDSM is of little use to them.
It may be of little use to them, but making rules based in "I don't like the current name" would just incentivize people to start whining about names. Subjective feelings are generally not a good basis for rule-making (when rules are based on subjective things they become terribly murky and arbitrary). At any rate, the GMP staff would be the final arbiters of that in this case, so I defer to them.

@Corbin:
A few personal reflections on the GMP, fiction and persistency...

Obsidian Ant once referred to the GMP as a tapestry for players to play against and tell stories (though I suspect he got it from Erimus first;)).

Anyways, this is also very much the way I see the GMP - as a sort of shared narrative where the narratives of individual explorers and their findings are woven together in a larger common narrative of the findings of the exploration community.
Yes I agree. As I said to marx, fanfiction can be collectively built, as well as separately in a more isolated way.

I like to use the word narrative rather than fiction partly because 'narrative' can cover both imaginary and real events - and the text entries of the GMP are all grounded in something that actually took place in this (admittedly fictional) game world: an expedition of players or an individual explorer came across something of note, or some special event took place at the site. I also like the word 'narrative' because a GMP entry are a part of the personal story of the CMDR who found and submitted it as well as a part of a shared story of exploration in the ED galaxy.
I agree, but it's still technically fanfiction. Not that that is bad, I'm not saying that. Just saying that as it's not canon, it does not work the same way. Fanfiction does not overrule fanfiction. Canon does in a way, but even then anyone can have fanfiction that's contrary/incoherent with canon. In this case that idea is to keep this narrative as close as possible to canon. But canon does not always follow what we do here, an example would be Salomé, AFAIK (correct me if I'm wrong) in the canon she was not killed by the SDC or whatever, as it actually happened in-game, and things like EDSM in part register things that actually happen in-game. It's a bit messy, this. That's exactly why I don't see that much reason to be upset about some little and basically inconsequential attribution or naming.

As I see it, the GMP offers something that the in-game exploration gameplay doesn´t really do, and that is persistency. When something is added to the GMP it is a sort of permant mark that you may leave on this gameworld, and because the POIs are distributed to other players via EDSM and EDD it gains a significance beyond personal fanfiction. It is not canon (except in a handful of cases where FD has adopted a GMP name), but it IS part of a shared narrative - to a much larger degree than the in-game first-discovered tags that an individual player only see once they arrive in a system.
Yes, I agree, never denied any of that. And as I said to marx, this kind of fanfiction and etc. is one of the things that I like about this game. The game might well be "shallow" if someone wants to characterize it that way, but this added "personal narrative" layer shared with lots of other people make the game much deeper and fun. It's a great platform for things like the GMP, and other community undertakings. I would not have played the game as much as I have if it weren't for that.

@BlackMirror:
In case the GMP team might be making a list of commanders who reserve/relinquish naming rights (Marx having already explicitly resereved) on their tags, I'd like to make clear that I freely relinquish them. If I want to name something, I will submit it, and if I don't submit it, any system with the Kuro Kagami tag is fair game, especially if I didn't tag all of the bodies.
Yeah, the issue is that that is extra work that someone would have to do. If the GMP staff want to do it, good. If not, also good. To me maintaining such a list seems like more work that it's worth tbh. But I'd add myself to the "my tags and submissions on places other than the official GMP thread are fair game" list if it were to exist.
 
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Marx, I can't help but think checking each submission against the in-game tag, and then trying to contact that commander, might at times grind the submission process to a halt unless a default timeout period was also defined.
I didn't suggest that, nor did anybody else. I just said that in my opinion, if there is a case where the first discoverer is not fine with what a submitter decided to name their find, then the discoverer should have priority. Perhaps I should have made this clear, but I thought it obvious that it should be the responsibility of the discoverer to state their objection if they have one, and not up to the GMP to pre-emptively ask people if they might not be fine with it.

Of course, it should be common courtesy for the submitter to ask the discoverer if they'd be fine with it, especially if they got the locations from them. However, you can't count on this.

In my case, I've recommended posting on the GMP to at least a dozen people, that they should post their rare finds from the ELW list there as well. With what they shared, I could have easily done so myself, but honestly, it never crossed my mind to name something that was found by another.


@ DVHeld: note that in many cases, the "first scanned (/ discovered) for EDSM by" doesn't match the actual first discovery tag in-game. That simply denotes who uploaded it in the first place. Bear in mind that for every visited system on EDSM, there are four others which aren't, and plenty of people are (correctly!) listed as the ones who first scanned them for EDSM, while they aren't who first discovered the system. See the Earth and Sol examples in my previous post to you.

While automatically adding the actual first discoverer to every auto-recorded system is not possible due to the game not logging that (yet?), adding it to a POI entry should be a quick matter. Look at the screenshot (which you have to do anyway), add the discoverer's tag if it's there, and if it's not, assume that the submitter was it. It should be their responsibility to note if the POI wasn't first discovered by them, not the GMP's to dig around.
 
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it should be the responsibility of the discoverer to state their objection if they have one, and not up to the GMP to pre-emptively ask people if they might not be fine with it.
That is much more workable, I'd not argue against that, except that it makes the system a bit less simple, and I like simple. And it still is additional work.
 
That is much more workable, I'd not argue against that, except that it makes the system a bit less simple, and I like simple. And it still is additional work.
Well, it's already not simple, as there already are nine guidelines to read, and a template to use. Yes, it is a small amount of additional work, but any change is some amount of work. If you wish to improve something, you have to do something. Mind you, the GMP team might decide that everything is alright as it is; that's up to them to decide, and not us.
 
I didn't suggest that, nor did anybody else. I just said that in my opinion, if there is a case where the first discoverer is not fine with what a submitter decided to name their find, then the discoverer should have priority. Perhaps I should have made this clear, but I thought it obvious that it should be the responsibility of the discoverer to state their objection if they have one, and not up to the GMP to pre-emptively ask people if they might not be fine with it.

Of course, it should be common courtesy for the submitter to ask the discoverer if they'd be fine with it, especially if they got the locations from them. However, you can't count on this.

Sorry, my mistake I guess. Fair enough.
 
@ Corbin Moran: I don't think it was originally intended as a platform for stories and fiction. Reading the introduction again (just to be sure), it talks about naming through-out, says descriptions a couple of times, and neither fiction nor stories are mentioned even once. The only times they are mentioned are in guidelines #2 and #8, but #2 is debatable: I'd say that the meaning behind it is that if a system had some interesting events but contains nothing special, it's still worthy of including. As for #8, that makes clear that all names are unofficial, so "fiction" wasn't the best wording there. In any case, at the start, it was either naming that was more important, or Erimus actually intended it another way but somehow made constant blunders while writing the text - which I strongly doubt.
But if you (plural) decide that you wish the GMP to promote community story-telling instead, then that's fine, but things could use improvements then. Such as including the authors of the entries on the entries themselves, like I suggested - and rewriting the text of the first post to make this direction clear.

Let me just clarify that when I talk about the GMP as a ´shared narrative´ it is grounded in what has taken place on the GMP from the very beginning: The naming and description of places. But when you as a player/pilot gets to name and share something, it becomes part of your personal story with Elite. When something is named and shared it becomes part of the common story of exploration. This reflection on the narrative nature of the GMP was probably not explicit at the start - it certainly wasn't for me when I started as a mapmaker with the First Great Expedition and later joined the GMP. It is more of a reflection that has gradually dawned as I have seen how the community interacts with the GMP - e.g. how the naming of a region encourages an expedition to go out and explore that particular area. And that part of the GMP (to have enticing names that invokes the imagination and encourages exploration) was stated explicitly from the very beginning (as I recall it).

- a great many other interesting points are being made in this thread, but I have to sign out for tonight before reflecting more on them. See ya :)
 
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@ khaos526, about other people renaming things that the inhabitants used for them: that example doesn't apply here, as you're be talking about areas that were already inhabited by the time others "discovered" it. I say quotes because personally, I don't count that as discovery. For example, in more accurate works, Columbus is not credited with discovering America, but with discovering a route from Europe to America. In Elite, nobody has named the unexplored and most importantly, unknown to all procedurally generated stuff. (Well, except those rare cases where Frontier later assigned non-procedural names to them.) If we were to apply your example to Elite, then it would be like a player deciding to want to rename, say, Achenar to Velvetland - and that's explicitly forbidden in the GMP.

Actually not at all. I was saying naming in EDSM to the standard naming convention is what it is currently and there is no problem with that. I can't see "Velvetland" being a proper name in the EDSM, unless there is a good reasoning behind such a name. That's what I was assuming this discussion was actually about.

If you were applying my naming convention to ED, then everything would be the same as it is now and the only difference would be that someone who tagged the system first could and should be allowed to rename it per EDSM standards to what they feel is better as they were the ones to first discover it. It had nothing to do with naming every single system out there by someone who tagged it, just the very special EDSM ones that are unique in some fashion and that already currently exist in EDSM.

There for the only things that could possibly be renamed are those currently in the EDSM database, or ones that get named in the future and are accepted. So PYRI EURK XM-M C7-0 will always be PYRI EURK XM-M C7-0, unless some mind boggling feature just suddenly gets discovered there or some major future event takes place in that system.

That's how the naming convention I was talking about would work. not as you interrupted it at all...
 
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