On Mon, Sep 12, 2011 at 9:32 AM, Sarah Stierch <sarah.stie...@gmail.com>wrote:

> I have no clue how I missed this (and perhaps it's been posted before?)
>
> http://wikimediafoundation.org/wiki/Resolution:Images_of_identifiable_people
>
> Perhaps we can lend a hand to assist in this?
>
> -Sarah
>

Yes, the WMF Board passed this resolution in May, and it helped focus the
discussion away from the idea that people want to delete controversial
content only because of they are prudes. Model consent for anyone who is
identifiable and has a reason to expect privacy is a minimum standard that
needs to be enforced on all wikis now. For all the reasons that we've
discussed recently on this mailing list, images of women who are being
sexualized benefit greatly from good enforcement of this policy.

IMO, the Commons policy needs to be tweaked to to ensure that the person
giving consent for the image to be taken understands that it will be
uploaded with a free license, and what that means.

Most of the the medical groups policies about medical images of people
assumes that the person in the image has less knowledge about where the
image might be used, and says that information needs to be provided to the
person so that they understand how widely that it might be disseminated.

Right now we don't have a procedures in place that help us gather informed
consent from models. This is an area that needs more work.

Also, we need to tweak the policy so that people who appear in a semi-public
places are protected. Many times people will go into a semi-public place
with  the expectation that only the people in that location will see them.
IMO, sunbathing on a beach outside your rented beach house does not mean
that you intended your image to be taken and uploaded for anyone in the
world to see and be re-used in publications without your consent. The same
is true for many people going about their normal routine. I don't think that
someone walking from their car (or bus) into work intended to give consent
for their photograph to be taken, uploaded with a free license, and their
body parts and fashion apparel be categorized, especially in a sexualized
way.

Since the people in many images do not have contact information provided,
someone re-using the image can not contact them to get permission. This
problem makes many of our images on Commons useless for people that want to
use best practices.

Sydney Poore
User:FloNight
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