Re: [Foundation-l] Wikipedia Attribution and Relicensing

2009-01-21 Thread Sam Johnston
On Tue, Jan 20, 2009 at 8:26 PM, geni geni...@gmail.com wrote:


 If the change to CC-BY-SA goes through I will be proposing a new
 wikimedia project to record what authors and reuses consider
 acceptable (and what people actually do if that happens) in terms of
 attribution for every form of reuse we can think of.


This is an interesting suggestion for a thread calling for Wikipedia to keep
it simple :)

If the rules are too complex they will be either ignored (and broken) or
avoided (eg users will go elsewhere). In particular, anything which involves
attempting to extract meaning from the (arbitrarily long and constantly
growing) edit histories or refer to a table of 'reuse scenarios' almost
certainly falls into the 'too complex for your average [re]user' category.

To use the cloud computing article again, there are almost 500 unique
editors including chestnuts like 'RealWorldExperience, CanadianLinuxUser,
MonkeyBounce, TutterMouse, Onmytoes4eva, Chadastrophic, Tree Hugger, Kibbled
Bits and Technobadger'. About half are IPs (which probably still need to be
credited) and there's even a few people I'd rather not credit were I to
reuse it myself. In this case at least, attempting to credit individuals as
currently proposed dilutes the value of attributions altogether and actually
does more harm than good - I would much rather 'contribute' my attribution
to Wikipedia.

Allowing users to discuss 'recommended' attributions eg on the talk page
could be another simple, effective solution. That way such claims could be
discussed and a concise list of authors maintained (subject to peer review).
It would ultimately be for the reuser to determine above and beyond the base
'Wikipedia' credit.

I would hope to see something like this emerge, which is not far from
Citizendium's relatively good example:

*If you reuse Wikipedia content you must at least reference the license and
attribute Wikipedia. You should also refer to the article itself and may
include individual author(s) from the history and/or attribution requests on
the talk page, using URLs where appropriate for the medium.
*

Unfortunately with wording like '*To re-distribute a page in any form,
provide credit to all the contributors.*' in the draft it seems I shouldn't
be holding my breath. In any case I hope this doesn't derail the migration -
perhaps asking the question about CC-BY-SA separately from the
implementation details would be best?

Sam

1.
http://vs.aka-online.de/cgi-bin/wppagehiststat.pl?lang=en.wikipediapage=cloud%20computing
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Re: [Foundation-l] Wikipedia Attribution and Relicensing

2009-01-21 Thread Falcorian
On Tue, Jan 20, 2009 at 10:55 AM, geni geni...@gmail.com wrote:

 2009/1/20 Anthony wikim...@inbox.org:
  That doesn't really any of my questions, though I was more looking for an
  answer from Erik or Mike anyway.
 
  It's a fairly important question, since compatibility with other works
 under
  CC-BY-SA is allegedly the main reason for the relicensing.
 
  Is the question clear?  Maybe I should be even more specific.  How would
 one
  go about using content from Citizendium in Wikipedia, if Wikipedia
  relicenses content under CC-BY-SA?

 Assuming a large number of authors on Citizendium. Use the export
 function there to provide the file in a useful format and reactivate
 the import function on en to export it (at a pinch is should be
 possible to put together a script that can grab the relevant
 information and turn it into a file suitable for import to wikipedia
 without having to use the export function).


I actually have such a script written in python already, and it would be
trivial for others to wirite similar ones. I suppoose my point is that
reusing content from other Wikis is easy if Import is turned back on (as you
keep full edit histories).

--Falcorian
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Re: [Foundation-l] Wikipedia Attribution and Relicensing

2009-01-20 Thread Sam Johnston
On Sun, Jan 18, 2009 at 3:40 PM, Anthony wikim...@inbox.org wrote:

 What about text works which were licensed under CC-BY-SA but were released
 somewhere other than Wikipedia?  Can these be incorporated into Wikipedia?
 How will their right to attribution be respected?  Is this allowance of
 reference by history URL built in to CC-BY-SA, or is it specific to
 Wikipedia?


The CC licenses give us a fair bit of room to move with regards to
attribution, allowing for pseudonums, taking into account the medium,
delegates (incl. publishing entities eg Wikipedia), etc.

I also stumbled on this[1] in commons which is interesting in the context of
the discussion about certain types of contribution (photographs)
inexplicably requiring stronger attribution:

Visible tags or
watermarkshttp://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Digital_watermarkinginside
images are strongly discouraged at Wikimedia Commons. So information
like Mr. Foobar, May 2005, CC-BY-SA shall not be written directly in the
image but in EXIF fields, which is technically even superior. The reasons
are:

   - We don't tag our Wikipedia articles with our names in a prominent way
   inside the article text *in order to step behind the work and let it speak
   for itself*, the same applies to the images (stepping behind own work and
   thus reducing personal vanity is crucial for
neutralityhttp://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/NPOV
   ).

Cheers,

Sam

1.
http://commons.wikimedia.org/wiki/Commons:Manipulating_meta_data#Purpose_for_using_EXIF_at_Commons
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Re: [Foundation-l] Wikipedia Attribution and Relicensing

2009-01-20 Thread Anthony
On Tue, Jan 20, 2009 at 12:10 PM, Anthony wikim...@inbox.org wrote:

 One problem with the URLs you gave me is that they don't seem to be very
 up-to-date.  For instance, in
 http://en.citizendium.org/wiki/CZ:Reusing_Citizendium_Content it says
 After Wikipedia finalizes its decision to allow relicensing of its contents
 under CC-by-sa, *GFDL* in the previous paragraph may be replaced by *
 CC-by-sa*.


I've reread that again and realized I was just misreading it.

That raises the question, though.  Has Citizendium relicensed its GFDL
content (including any content it imported from Wikipedia before November 1,
2008) under CC-BY-SA?
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Re: [Foundation-l] Wikipedia Attribution and Relicensing

2009-01-20 Thread geni
2009/1/20 Anthony wikim...@inbox.org:
 That doesn't really any of my questions, though I was more looking for an
 answer from Erik or Mike anyway.

 It's a fairly important question, since compatibility with other works under
 CC-BY-SA is allegedly the main reason for the relicensing.

 Is the question clear?  Maybe I should be even more specific.  How would one
 go about using content from Citizendium in Wikipedia, if Wikipedia
 relicenses content under CC-BY-SA?

Assuming a large number of authors on Citizendium. Use the export
function there to provide the file in a useful format and reactivate
the import function on en to export it (at a pinch is should be
possible to put together a script that can grab the relevant
information and turn it into a file suitable for import to wikipedia
without having to use the export function).

For smaller numbers of authors there are workarounds.

  How would a third party go about using
 the combined work?

Depends on the context.

-- 
geni

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Re: [Foundation-l] Wikipedia Attribution and Relicensing

2009-01-20 Thread Erik Moeller
2009/1/20 Anthony wikim...@inbox.org:
 Is the question clear?  Maybe I should be even more specific.  How would one
 go about using content from Citizendium in Wikipedia, if Wikipedia
 relicenses content under CC-BY-SA?  How would a third party go about using
 the combined work?  How would the attribution rights of the Citizendium
 contributors be respected?

I would say in part this is a problem that the community can
collectively solve, as it has historically: We've incorporated
information from other GFDL works and attributed them, for example.
And we can apply common sense. Contributors to wikis typically have
different attribution expectations than authors of monographs who have
no connection to the wiki world. Both authors and re-users will
express objections or support for different models. And wikis will
probably want to develop reasonable standards between them that
facilitate their mutual goals.

I do believe there are probably technical improvements that we can
make to further support free information exchange, such as a richer
page history feature, or a metadata blob for this kind of information.
But I don't think that such improvements are a necessary precondition:
people will continue to use footers, page histories, and talk pages to
denote such information. Attribution standards can always be revised
based on the respectful dialog between the involved parties. Resolving
legal incompatibility, on the other hand, is a necessary precondition
for even having these conversations.
-- 
Erik Möller
Deputy Director, Wikimedia Foundation

Support Free Knowledge: http://wikimediafoundation.org/wiki/Donate

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Re: [Foundation-l] Wikipedia Attribution and Relicensing

2009-01-18 Thread Anthony
On Fri, Jan 16, 2009 at 8:55 PM, Erik Moeller e...@wikimedia.org wrote:

 2009/1/16 Jussi-Ville Heiskanen cimonav...@gmail.com:

  It seems though
  that the _prospect_ of very speculative and indecisively
  defined new ways of showing editors _on_ wikipedia
  pages fringes (not requiring it downstream even), is
  what is really concretely even hinted at...

 The downstream requirement that we're talking about right now is:
 a) If there are up to five authors, name them directly alongside the
 article;
 b) If there are more than five, you can refer to a copy of the history.


What about text works which were licensed under CC-BY-SA but were released
somewhere other than Wikipedia?  Can these be incorporated into Wikipedia?
How will their right to attribution be respected?  Is this allowance of
reference by history URL built in to CC-BY-SA, or is it specific to
Wikipedia?
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Re: [Foundation-l] Wikipedia Attribution and Relicensing

2009-01-17 Thread Delirium
Jussi-Ville Heiskanen wrote:
 But in terms of pictures, photographs is a very very minor
 segment indeed. Discussing the matter solely in terms
 of photographs is very diversionary.
   
I certainly didn't intend to be diversionary; rather, I'm a bit confused 
as to what the vast majority of non-photograph pictures I've mised are. 
Aren't the vast majority of the pictures on Wikimedia commons 
photographs? How is that a very very minor segment? We're discussing 
licensing for media files that are part of the Wikimedia project, after all.

What pictures *do* you mean? Heck, our diagrams almost always have a 
single author too, from some spot-checking I've done, as do our maps. I 
can't think of a single category of works that make up a significant 
proportion of Wikimedia-distributed media files that usually have 
multiple authors.

-Mark


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Re: [Foundation-l] Wikipedia Attribution and Relicensing

2009-01-16 Thread Brian
I like Sam's point.

Do you really want to print this on a t-shirt?

http://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=Main_Pageaction=history

Also, it makes specific reference to Wikipedia.


On Fri, Jan 16, 2009 at 2:07 PM, Erik Moeller e...@wikimedia.org wrote:

 2009/1/14 Sam Johnston s...@samj.net:
  It appears that it would be adequate (as a minimum acceptable standard)
 to
  specify the CC-BY-SA license and refer to the Wikipedia article -
 certainly
  the license section 4(c) allows for significant flexibility in this
 regard.
  The attribution itself would then be something like Wikipedia 'Widgets'
  article which is enough in itself for a user to be able to find the
 article
  and associated revision history (concise attributions are critical
  especially for print work, on t-shirts, etc.).

 There are a couple of counterpoints to this:

 * For pictures, sound files, etc., there is often just a single
 author. If you are the photographer of a high resolution panorama that
 you've contributed to Wikipedia, I think it's a reasonable expectation
 to be named (Photo by Sam Johnston), as opposed to being referred to
 as Photo from Wikipedia. This is equally true, I think, for articles
 where there is just a single author, or for pictures which have been
 subsequently edited a few times.

 * The attribution terms should avoid requiring specific reference to
 Wikipedia, so that it's clear that there is not necessarily a tie
 between the project in which collaboration currently happens, and any
 future use of the content. If someone creates a better alternative to
 Wikipedia where the content is used, why should it be continued to be
 attributed to Wikipedia, rather than the authors?

 I think requiring attribution-by-history should be the best practice
 for heavily edited articles, at least until we more prominently point
 out the author credit in the article footer.
 --
 Erik Möller
 Deputy Director, Wikimedia Foundation

 Support Free Knowledge: http://wikimediafoundation.org/wiki/Donate

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Re: [Foundation-l] Wikipedia Attribution and Relicensing

2009-01-16 Thread Jussi-Ville Heiskanen
Erik Moeller wrote:

 I think requiring attribution-by-history should be the best practice
 for heavily edited articles, at least until we more prominently point
 out the author credit in the article footer.
   


Eh? Which should it be? A requirement, or a best practise?

You can't have it both ways.


Yours,

Jussi-Ville Heiskanen



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Re: [Foundation-l] Wikipedia Attribution and Relicensing

2009-01-16 Thread geni
2009/1/16 Brian brian.min...@colorado.edu:
 I like Sam's point.

 Do you really want to print this on a t-shirt?

 http://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=Main_Pageaction=history

 Also, it makes specific reference to Wikipedia.



Since you would also have to include complete copies of the GFDL and
GPL I wouldn't worry overmuch.


-- 
geni

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Re: [Foundation-l] Wikipedia Attribution and Relicensing

2009-01-16 Thread Brian
I am talking about CC-BY-SA geni.

On Fri, Jan 16, 2009 at 2:34 PM, geni geni...@gmail.com wrote:

 2009/1/16 Brian brian.min...@colorado.edu:
  I like Sam's point.
 
  Do you really want to print this on a t-shirt?
 
  http://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=Main_Pageaction=history
 
  Also, it makes specific reference to Wikipedia.
 
 

 Since you would also have to include complete copies of the GFDL and
 GPL I wouldn't worry overmuch.


 --
 geni

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Re: [Foundation-l] Wikipedia Attribution and Relicensing

2009-01-16 Thread Jussi-Ville Heiskanen
Erik Moeller wrote:
 2009/1/16 Jussi-Ville Heiskanen cimonav...@gmail.com:
   
 Erik Moeller wrote:

 
 I think requiring attribution-by-history should be the best practice
 for heavily edited articles, at least until we more prominently point
 out the author credit in the article footer.

   
 Eh? Which should it be? A requirement, or a best practise?
 

 What I meant is, 'requiring attribution-by-history-reference seems
 like the most reasonable attribution requirement, at least
 unless/until attribution is more visible on the article page itself.'
   

If you are going to qualify things as finely as seems like
the most reasonable attribution requirement; wouldn't
it be much more useful to use language like recommend
or suggest instead of require?


Yours,

Jussi-Ville Heiskanen



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Re: [Foundation-l] Wikipedia Attribution and Relicensing

2009-01-16 Thread Brian
What is an attribution-by-history-reference? How come it has to be a
url and not something like:

The term Bushism is a neologism that refers to a number of peculiar
words, phrases, pronunciations, malapropisms, and semantic or
linguistic errors that have occurred in the public speaking of United
States President George W. Bush. (Wikipedia, Bushism)

Isn't this the spirit of the new license? It lets you know that
somewhere in the history of the Wikipedia article on Bushism you can
find the author(s) of this piece of text. You could make it easier to
find the author by allowing per-article history search in the
software.

On Fri, Jan 16, 2009 at 2:56 PM, Erik Moeller e...@wikimedia.org wrote:

 2009/1/16 Jussi-Ville Heiskanen cimonav...@gmail.com:
  Erik Moeller wrote:
 
  I think requiring attribution-by-history should be the best practice
  for heavily edited articles, at least until we more prominently point
  out the author credit in the article footer.
 
 
 
  Eh? Which should it be? A requirement, or a best practise?

 What I meant is, 'requiring attribution-by-history-reference seems
 like the most reasonable attribution requirement, at least
 unless/until attribution is more visible on the article page itself.'
 --
 Erik Möller
 Deputy Director, Wikimedia Foundation

 Support Free Knowledge: http://wikimediafoundation.org/wiki/Donate

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Re: [Foundation-l] Wikipedia Attribution and Relicensing

2009-01-16 Thread Jussi-Ville Heiskanen
Erik Moeller wrote:
 2009/1/14 Sam Johnston s...@samj.net:
   
 It appears that it would be adequate (as a minimum acceptable standard) to
 specify the CC-BY-SA license and refer to the Wikipedia article - certainly
 the license section 4(c) allows for significant flexibility in this regard.
 The attribution itself would then be something like Wikipedia 'Widgets'
 article which is enough in itself for a user to be able to find the article
 and associated revision history (concise attributions are critical
 especially for print work, on t-shirts, etc.).
 

 There are a couple of counterpoints to this:

 * For pictures, sound files, etc., there is often just a single
 author. If you are the photographer of a high resolution panorama that
 you've contributed to Wikipedia, I think it's a reasonable expectation
 to be named (Photo by Sam Johnston), as opposed to being referred to
 as Photo from Wikipedia. This is equally true, I think, for articles
 where there is just a single author, or for pictures which have been
 subsequently edited a few times.
   
I have no intention of in any shape or form binding myself
to the views expounded by Anthony on this or any other
list, but really, this goes beyond the pale.

*Neither* of those options are right or just.

That you are representing it as a choice between those
two options is a great travesty.

Attribution here can only be a very *minimal* requirement,
I cannot see how the whole history of alterations could be
somehow swept under the carpet...


Yours,

Jussi-Ville Heiskanen


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Re: [Foundation-l] Wikipedia Attribution and Relicensing

2009-01-16 Thread Erik Moeller
2009/1/16 Jussi-Ville Heiskanen cimonav...@gmail.com:
 Attribution here can only be a very *minimal* requirement,
 I cannot see how the whole history of alterations could be
 somehow swept under the carpet...

Are you referring to indicating changes? Per CC-BY-SA, 3.b:

... to create and Reproduce Adaptations provided that any such
Adaptation, including any translation in any medium, takes reasonable
steps to clearly label, demarcate or otherwise identify that changes
were made to the original Work. For example, a translation could be
marked The original work was translated from English to Spanish, or
a modification could indicate The original work has been modified.;
-- 
Erik Möller
Deputy Director, Wikimedia Foundation

Support Free Knowledge: http://wikimediafoundation.org/wiki/Donate

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Re: [Foundation-l] Wikipedia Attribution and Relicensing

2009-01-16 Thread Jussi-Ville Heiskanen
Erik Moeller wrote:

 * The attribution terms should avoid requiring specific reference to
 Wikipedia, so that it's clear that there is not necessarily a tie
 between the project in which collaboration currently happens, and any
 future use of the content. If someone creates a better alternative to
 Wikipedia where the content is used, why should it be continued to be
 attributed to Wikipedia, rather than the authors?
   

I must be  a moron or at least functionally illiterate, since
I simply cannot parse the previous paragraph in a way
that makes logical sense.

Let me try though...

Okay. Content should be attributed to authors... Ouch!

Wait... Sorry, still can't parse it in context...


Yours,

Jussi-Ville Heiskanen




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Re: [Foundation-l] Wikipedia Attribution and Relicensing

2009-01-16 Thread Jussi-Ville Heiskanen
Erik Moeller wrote:
 2009/1/16 Jussi-Ville Heiskanen cimonav...@gmail.com:
   
 Attribution here can only be a very *minimal* requirement,
 I cannot see how the whole history of alterations could be
 somehow swept under the carpet...
 

 Are you referring to indicating changes? Per CC-BY-SA, 3.b:

 ... to create and Reproduce Adaptations provided that any such
 Adaptation, including any translation in any medium, takes reasonable
 steps to clearly label, demarcate or otherwise identify that changes
 were made to the original Work. For example, a translation could be
 marked The original work was translated from English to Spanish, or
 a modification could indicate The original work has been modified.;
   
That talks about translations, rather than editing images.

I don't know if you are well acquainted with the long and
arduous debate over whether translations are creative acts...

Editing an image is not usually an act that even by
pre-supposition is an adaptation or rendition that is
intended to approach a faithfully ad-equate (as
distinguished from adequate) translation. When
editing an image departs from being a faithful
representation from what the original work of art
presented, of course it would not be a mere
adaptation.


Yours,

Jussi-Ville Heiskanen


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Re: [Foundation-l] Wikipedia Attribution and Relicensing

2009-01-16 Thread Jussi-Ville Heiskanen
Erik Moeller wrote:
 * For pictures, sound files, etc., there is often just a single
 author. 
This is of course very far from the truth. If you did
create the media file from your very own brain-pan,
yes, this would be accurate, but to say that that this
is often the case, is somewhat quizzical to say the
least.


Yours,

Jussi-Ville Heiskanen




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Re: [Foundation-l] Wikipedia Attribution and Relicensing

2009-01-16 Thread Jussi-Ville Heiskanen
Erik Moeller wrote:
 2009/1/16 Jussi-Ville Heiskanen cimonav...@gmail.com:
   
 Erik Moeller wrote:
 
 * The attribution terms should avoid requiring specific reference to
 Wikipedia, so that it's clear that there is not necessarily a tie
 between the project in which collaboration currently happens, and any
 future use of the content. If someone creates a better alternative to
 Wikipedia where the content is used, why should it be continued to be
 attributed to Wikipedia, rather than the authors?

   
 I must be  a moron or at least functionally illiterate, since
 I simply cannot parse the previous paragraph in a way
 that makes logical sense.
 

 :-)

   
I whole-heartedly apologize to you for previously
intimating that your ability at humour is at the
native level of Germans everywhere around the
globe.

:-)))

 Imagine that:

 1) The Wikimedia Foundation is taken over by evil reptilian kitten eaters;

 2) Wikipedians join forces to fork Wikipedia into Freependium, which
 has an explicit policy to not eat kittens (FP:DONOTEAT);

 3) Two years later, nobody uses Wikipedia anymore except for a few die
 hard kitten eaters;

 4) Yet, millions of Freependium users need to continue to reference
 the kitten eating Wikipedia because of the attribution requirements.

 Unlikely? Perhaps - though some people say that the evil reptilian
 kitten eater takeover has already begun. The way around this is to
 formulate attribution requirements that do not require specific
 reference to Wikipedia, but only to the individuals who contributed
 the text.
   

I really laughed at this.

Still waiting for a substantive reply though.


Yours,

Jussi-Ville Heiskanen



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Re: [Foundation-l] Wikipedia Attribution and Relicensing

2009-01-16 Thread Erik Moeller
2009/1/16 Sam Johnston s...@samj.net:
 That is, you must at least reference Wikipedia and the article, but it may
 be appropriate to additionally *or* alternatively refer to individual
 contributor(s).

Yes - I agree with this. The only question would be whether referring
to the history or to the article are substantially different in terms
of attribution. In community-developed guidelines regarding GFDL
re-use, both standards have existed; re-use recommendations in en.wp's
Wikipedia:Copyrights refer to the article URL, for example. The
current recommendations are intended to be based on a lowest common
denominator among WMF- and community-developed interpretations of
reasonable GFDL attribution obligations for re-users, to ensure that
the licensing regime we may implement in the future is consistent with
the expectations of volunteers who have made contributions in the
past.

Let's broaden the question a bit:

Provided that,
- the site footer for articles is modified to name contributors if
there are fewer than six;
- the site footer also refers to the page history for credit -

Are there participants in this discussion who would consider
attribution-by-history-URL for pages with  5 authors acceptable, but
who would consider attribution-by-article-URL unacceptable? I think if
we lower the requirements in this regard, it needs to be based on more
than a discussion here, but it would be good to get some informal
feedback on the question first.

-- 
Erik Möller
Deputy Director, Wikimedia Foundation

Support Free Knowledge: http://wikimediafoundation.org/wiki/Donate

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Re: [Foundation-l] Wikipedia Attribution and Relicensing

2009-01-16 Thread Sam Johnston
On Fri, Jan 16, 2009 at 10:07 PM, Erik Moeller e...@wikimedia.org wrote:

 * For pictures, sound files, etc., there is often just a single author. If
 you are the photographer of a high resolution panorama that you've
 contributed to Wikipedia, I think it's a reasonable expectation to be named
 (Photo by Sam Johnston), as opposed to being referred to as Photo from
 Wikipedia. This is equally true, I think, for articles where there is just
 a single author, or for pictures which have been subsequently edited a few
 times.


I would consider this an exception rather than the rule and in any case the
content author could always approach a content consumer to request
attribution. The consumer then has the option to cater to the author's
request but doesn't have to stop the presses for fear of an injunction as
giving them the option avoids any possibility for conflict. If contributors
are more interested in self-promotion than the community then they should
probably be selling on stock photo sites and writing Knols ;)

I do think the potential for internal and external conflict needs to be
carefully considered as there could be serious repurcussions in terms of
injunctions, bad will, etc.


 * The attribution terms should avoid requiring specific reference to
 Wikipedia, so that it's clear that there is not necessarily a tie between
 the project in which collaboration currently happens, and any future use of
 the content. If someone creates a better alternative to Wikipedia where the
 content is used, why should it be continued to be attributed to Wikipedia,
 rather than the authors?


I was not proposing to *require* attribution to Wikipedia (indeed there
would be Wikipedians bearing pitchforks were WMF to try this on), rather
merely to *allow* it in order to foster re-use and avoid conflicts.


 I think requiring attribution-by-history should be the best practice
 for heavily edited articles, at least until we more prominently point
 out the author credit in the article footer.


The history for heavily edited articles is essentially opaque and claiming
that there is value to be derived from it is likely to mislead consumers.
Even if we were to provide statistics (say under a new 'Contribut[ions|ors]'
tab) we all know that edit counts are notoriously unreliable indicators and
besides, all legitimate edits are valuable.

Sam
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Re: [Foundation-l] Wikipedia Attribution and Relicensing

2009-01-16 Thread Jussi-Ville Heiskanen
Erik Moeller wrote:
 2009/1/16 Jussi-Ville Heiskanen cimonav...@gmail.com:
   
 I must be  a moron or at least functionally illiterate, since
 I simply cannot parse the previous paragraph in a way
 that makes logical sense.
 

 :-)

 Imagine that:

   

...

 Unlikely? Perhaps - though some people say that the evil reptilian
 kitten eater takeover has already begun. The way around this is to
 formulate attribution requirements that do not require specific
 reference to Wikipedia, but only to the individuals who contributed
 the text.
   

This actually looks fairly good on the surface, if that would
in fact be all there was to it...

If there really was a superordinate goal of requiring
reference to the individuals who contributed the text,
I would be the first to applaud you, Erik. It seems though
that the _prospect_ of very speculative and indecisively
defined new ways of showing editors _on_ wikipedia
pages fringes (not requiring it downstream even), is
what is really concretely even hinted at...

So, come on... we just aren't buying the spiel.


Yours,

Jussi-Ville Heiskanen


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Re: [Foundation-l] Wikipedia Attribution and Relicensing

2009-01-16 Thread Delirium
Jussi-Ville Heiskanen wrote:
 Erik Moeller wrote:
   
 * For pictures, sound files, etc., there is often just a single
 author. 
 
 This is of course very far from the truth. If you did
 create the media file from your very own brain-pan,
 yes, this would be accurate, but to say that that this
 is often the case, is somewhat quizzical to say the
 least.
   

I can see that for music---there's often songwriting, performance, etc. 
copyrights. But for photographs I would think it's not only often the 
case, but usually the case, that there is a single author, the 
photographer. The only common exceptions I can think of are photographs 
of copyrighted works, which have the copyright of the work being 
photographed attached to them also. There's also the relatively rare 
case of derivative works of free-licensed photographs, where the editing 
is creative enough to qualify for an independent copyright (i.e. not 
just resizing or applying a Photoshop filter).

-Mark


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Re: [Foundation-l] Wikipedia Attribution and Relicensing

2009-01-16 Thread Erik Moeller
2009/1/16 Jussi-Ville Heiskanen cimonav...@gmail.com:

 It seems though
 that the _prospect_ of very speculative and indecisively
 defined new ways of showing editors _on_ wikipedia
 pages fringes (not requiring it downstream even), is
 what is really concretely even hinted at...

The downstream requirement that we're talking about right now is:
a) If there are up to five authors, name them directly alongside the article;
b) If there are more than five, you can refer to a copy of the history.

The only issue here is that Wikipedia itself is not consistent with
this principle of 'giving visible attribution when it can be
reasonably expected to do so', because WP itself only ever attributes
by link to the page history. So, the reason to add usernames to the WP
footer in case of a) would be precisely to have consistent rules for
all users of WP content. (It would also simplify determining the five
names for re-users.) I don't view such a change as part of the
proposed license update; I think it needs to be a separate discussion.

In this thread, the argument has been made that these requirements are
going too far, or not far enough. The reason they are formulated as
they are is to be consistent with the expectations set forth by the
GFDL itself, and the re-use guidelines implemented throughout WP and
other WMF projects.
-- 
Erik Möller
Deputy Director, Wikimedia Foundation

Support Free Knowledge: http://wikimediafoundation.org/wiki/Donate

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Re: [Foundation-l] Wikipedia Attribution and Relicensing

2009-01-16 Thread Sam Johnston
On Sat, Jan 17, 2009 at 2:25 AM, Erik Moeller e...@wikimedia.org wrote:

 2009/1/16 Sam Johnston s...@samj.net:
  That is, you must at least reference Wikipedia and the article, but it
 may
  be appropriate to additionally *or* alternatively refer to individual
  contributor(s).

 Yes - I agree with this. The only question would be whether referring
 to the history or to the article are substantially different in terms
 of attribution.


I don't think so - they are intrinsically linked like the cover of a book
(where this stuff traditionally belongs), however it could be good to state
the obvious ala:

All text is available under the terms of the GNU Free Documentation
License. (See Copyrights for details *and History for contribut[ions|ors]).


It would also be possible (but not necessarily sensible) to list everyone,
even for large contributor lists:

The following users have contributed to this article: X, Y, Z.

Finally, one could introduce a concept of article 'owners' or 'editors'
similar to open source projects, though that would be a significant
deviation from the status quo and would likely cause more problems than it
would fix.

In community-developed guidelines regarding GFDL
 re-use, both standards have existed; re-use recommendations in en.wp's
 Wikipedia:Copyrights refer to the article URL, for example.


That's fine for the Web but not so good elsewhere (like on t-shirts,
articles, books, prints, etc.). Short URLs (ala http://tinyurl.com/) may
help but better to avoid the problem altogether by being flexible. Brian's
Bushism example before was a good one.


 Let's broaden the question a bit:

 Provided that,
 - the site footer for articles is modified to name contributors if
 there are fewer than six;
 - the site footer also refers to the page history for credit -

 Are there participants in this discussion who would consider
 attribution-by-history-URL for pages with  5 authors acceptable, but
 who would consider attribution-by-article-URL unacceptable? I think if we
 lower the requirements in this regard, it needs to be based on more than a
 discussion here, but it would be good to get some informal feedback on the
 question first.


Another important point to consider (aside from the fact that it would
require non-trivial changes and promote useless edits for 'credit whoring')
is that we're often not talking about 'Photo by Sam Johnston' but rather
having to credit the likes of:

   - Fükenwulf
   - Bastard Soap
   - Justjihad
   - AnarcistPig
   - Cheesypoo

And these are just some of the ones that were recently *allowed* on review.
Reality is that many (most?) Wikipedia usernames are not suitable for public
consumption and are often disassociated from real identities anyway.

For a real life example, an ex-partner of mine recently referenced the cloud
computing article in his blog, apparently without realising that I wrote it.
I don't particularly care but apparently he does because the link is now
nowhere to be found. There's a handful of people I wouldn't want to credit
either for whatever reason (competitors in company documents for example)
but that shouldn't preclude anyone from reusing Wikipedia content.

Sam
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Re: [Foundation-l] Wikipedia Attribution and Relicensing

2009-01-16 Thread Jussi-Ville Heiskanen
Delirium wrote:
 Jussi-Ville Heiskanen wrote:
   
 Erik Moeller wrote:
   
 
 * For pictures, sound files, etc., there is often just a single
 author. 
 
   
 This is of course very far from the truth. If you did
 create the media file from your very own brain-pan,
 yes, this would be accurate, but to say that that this
 is often the case, is somewhat quizzical to say the
 least.
   
 

 I can see that for music---there's often songwriting, performance, etc. 
 copyrights. But for photographs I would think it's not only often the 
 case, but usually the case, that there is a single author, the 
 photographer. The only common exceptions I can think of are photographs 
 of copyrighted works, which have the copyright of the work being 
 photographed attached to them also. There's also the relatively rare 
 case of derivative works of free-licensed photographs, where the editing 
 is creative enough to qualify for an independent copyright (i.e. not 
 just resizing or applying a Photoshop filter).

   

First of all, even though you grant my thesis in terms of
music, that is still not even a major segment of sound
files, though perhaps the segment with the highest
profile in terms of intellectual property rights contentiousness.


But in terms of pictures, photographs is a very very minor
segment indeed. Discussing the matter solely in terms
of photographs is very diversionary.


Yours,

Jussi-Ville Heiskanen




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Re: [Foundation-l] Wikipedia Attribution and Relicensing

2009-01-16 Thread Jussi-Ville Heiskanen
Erik Moeller wrote:

 In this thread, the argument has been made that these requirements are
 going too far, or not far enough. The reason they are formulated as
 they are is to be consistent with the expectations set forth by the
 GFDL itself, and the re-use guidelines implemented throughout WP and
 other WMF projects.
   

I think the argument that I have been making consistently
is that you have been dancing all around the field about
where you actually stand on these issues, and persistently
refuse to state your real preferences, much less where your
red lines are set.

And that furthermore, many of your statements flatly
contradict each other logically. Sadly.


Yours,

Jussi-Ville Heiskanen


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[Foundation-l] Wikipedia Attribution and Relicensing

2009-01-14 Thread Sam Johnston
Hi,

I've been following with great interest the endeavour to relicense Wikipedia
for some time, though this is my first meaningful contribution to it.
Attribution is an important and sensitive issue but I think the discussions
so far are missing a great opportunity to promote Wikipedia itself while
further simplifying (and thus fostering) re-use. Focus so far has been on
arduous processes for identifying authors and linking to revision histories
which runs the risk of continuing to stifle adoption of content even after
re-licensing.

It appears that it would be adequate (as a minimum acceptable standard) to
specify the CC-BY-SA license and refer to the Wikipedia article - certainly
the license section 4(c) allows for significant flexibility in this regard.
The attribution itself would then be something like Wikipedia 'Widgets'
article which is enough in itself for a user to be able to find the article
and associated revision history (concise attributions are critical
especially for print work, on t-shirts, etc.).

My primary concern is that it can be essentially impossible to reliably
identify key contributers, and that doing so in an environment of stigmergic
collaboration can be very misleading as to the value of each contribution
(even the most minor of edits play a critical role in the building of
trust). It is also a potential source of significant contention, both
internally between editors and externally with editors individually seeking
attribution from content consumers.

Take for example the cloud
computinghttp://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Cloud_computingarticle which I
[re]wrote last year, the vast majority of which is to this
day still my work. In this case it is clear from the
statisticshttp://vs.aka-online.de/cgi-bin/wppagehiststat.pl?lang=en.wikipediapage=cloud%20computingthat
I am the primary/original author but had I have confined my updates to
a single edit there would be no way to reliably identify me, short of
tracking the owner of each and every character (and even this is far from
perfect). In any case my contribution was intended to further the objects of
Wikipedia and if I need to derive recognition for my work then I will
reference it directly myself.

Please consider adopting as low a minimum acceptable standard for
attributions as possible so as to derive the full benefit from this exciting
transition by lowering the barriers to participation.

Kind regards,

Sam
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