Re: [WikiEN-l] Images that are PD in their country of origin

2010-02-11 Thread Anthony
On Sun, Feb 7, 2010 at 11:13 PM, Liam Wyatt liamwy...@gmail.com wrote:

 I agree that it is annoying to think of commons admins going to all this
 trouble just for the benefit of unknown people selling t-shirts, but if
 people *aren't* allowed to sell t-shirts then it's not free-culture
 project.


It's not a free culture project.  It's a free educational content (1)
project.

(1) http://wikimediafoundation.org/wiki/Mission_statement
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Re: [WikiEN-l] Images that are PD in their country of origin

2010-02-11 Thread Anthony
On Sun, Feb 7, 2010 at 9:29 AM, SlimVirgin slimvir...@gmail.com wrote:

 Can anyone help with an authoritative opinion about this? The doubts about
 it are causing problems on a number of articles, including during featured
 article reviews.

 Where an image is in the public domain in its country of origin, and that
 country is not the U.S., I believe we still have to show that it is PD in
 the U.S. before we can use it, because the Foundation's servers are in the
 U.S..


Who is the we?  It's not clear to me how the location of the Foundation's
servers would be relevant.
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Re: [WikiEN-l] Images that are PD in their country of origin

2010-02-11 Thread Carcharoth
On Mon, Feb 8, 2010 at 5:33 AM, Anthony wikim...@inbox.org wrote:
 On Sun, Feb 7, 2010 at 11:13 PM, Liam Wyatt liamwy...@gmail.com wrote:

 I agree that it is annoying to think of commons admins going to all this
 trouble just for the benefit of unknown people selling t-shirts, but if
 people *aren't* allowed to sell t-shirts then it's not free-culture
 project.


 It's not a free culture project.  It's a free educational content (1)
 project.

 (1) http://wikimediafoundation.org/wiki/Mission_statement

Really, to give the context, you need to quote it in full:

The mission of the Wikimedia Foundation is to empower and engage
people around the world to collect and develop educational content
under a free license or in the public domain, and to disseminate it
effectively and globally.

In collaboration with a network of chapters, the Foundation provides
the essential infrastructure and an organizational framework for the
support and development of multilingual wiki projects and other
endeavors which serve this mission. The Foundation will make and keep
useful information from its projects available on the Internet free of
charge, in perpetuity.

I agree that the educational content and free license or in the
public domain aspects do often conflict, but both aspects need to be
borne in mind when debating such cases.

Carcharoth

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Re: [WikiEN-l] Images that are PD in their country of origin

2010-02-11 Thread SlimVirgin
On Thu, Feb 11, 2010 at 04:34, Carcharoth carcharot...@googlemail.comwrote:


 I agree that the educational content and free license or in the
 public domain aspects do often conflict, but both aspects need to be
 borne in mind when debating such cases.

 Right, but both aspects aren't borne in mind, that's the problem. The free
eclipses the educational. The educational often has to sneak in the back
door under the guise of fair use, reduced in size and quality, argued over
endlessly and depressingly year after year, just because it doesn't fit one
of our standard U.S.-based free-licence tags.

Please ponder on the grotesque absurdity of a project designed to empower,
collect, develop and disseminate etc having policies in place that threaten
Holocaust images with deletion, images that were taken by victims at
enormous personal risk precisely to tell the world what was happening.

Imagine that one of those victims were here now, part of this discussion.
Please explain to him why we can't develop image policies that avoid that
outcome.

Sarah
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Re: [WikiEN-l] Images that are PD in their country of origin

2010-02-11 Thread Ken Arromdee
On Thu, 11 Feb 2010, SlimVirgin wrote:
 Imagine that one of those victims were here now, part of this discussion.
 Please explain to him why we can't develop image policies that avoid that
 outcome.

If one of the victims was here now, and he took the picture, he could grant
a free license and we could use it.

Anyway, I don't think there's as much a separation between this and our
fair use image policy as you seem to think (not in this message, in previous
ones).  It's the *very same* attitude that creates a ridiculous fair use
policy which also creates a ridiculous no-proof-it's-PD policy.

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Re: [WikiEN-l] Images that are PD in their country of origin

2010-02-10 Thread Andrew Gray
On 10 February 2010 02:58, Durova nadezhda.dur...@gmail.com wrote:

 But we keep getting editors who use the PD-old template anyway as an
 exercise in wishful thinking.  Too often, the existence of a valid
 copyright is debatable becomes a euphemism for I've got a lousy source and
 haven't done enough research.

I've sometimes thought that, in an ideal world, we should just phase
out PD-old and all its forms - it's often, as you say, wishful
thinking, or sometimes (and I know in my early days I did this) a
cover for a misunderstanding about just what the thresholds are.

So what'd we replace it with? Something functionally like...

{{copyright
|date=1895
|location=Germany
|author=anonymous
}}

...and have it then spit out, well, this image is free under German
copyright law (sect. 473 ii) and in the United States (Title 15, 7)
or the like, with an option to click to have it generate a copyright
status in Canada or France or where have you. We do *have* this data
for a sizable proportion of our images, after all, and it's a bit lazy
when we take all this and slap a well, PD, I guess rubber-stamp on
it!

I doubt this is *practical* in the near term, of course, but it's a
thought. Any other ideas?

-- 
- Andrew Gray
  andrew.g...@dunelm.org.uk

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Re: [WikiEN-l] Images that are PD in their country of origin

2010-02-10 Thread David Gerard
On 10 February 2010 13:21, Andrew Gray andrew.g...@dunelm.org.uk wrote:

 I've sometimes thought that, in an ideal world, we should just phase
 out PD-old and all its forms - it's often, as you say, wishful
 thinking, or sometimes (and I know in my early days I did this) a
 cover for a misunderstanding about just what the thresholds are.
 So what'd we replace it with? Something functionally like...
 {{copyright
 |date=1895
 |location=Germany
 |author=anonymous
 }}
 ...and have it then spit out, well, this image is free under German
 copyright law (sect. 473 ii) and in the United States (Title 15, 7)
 or the like, with an option to click to have it generate a copyright
 status in Canada or France or where have you. We do *have* this data
 for a sizable proportion of our images, after all, and it's a bit lazy
 when we take all this and slap a well, PD, I guess rubber-stamp on
 it!
 I doubt this is *practical* in the near term, of course, but it's a
 thought. Any other ideas?


I think this is a brilliant idea and would deal with the problem
marvellously. And it should be reasonably easy to implement in an
incremental manner without disruption.

cc to commons-l - is there anything about this that'd be hard? Apart
from going through a zillion images. The key point is it wouldn't
disrupt anything existing.


- d.

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Re: [WikiEN-l] Images that are PD in their country of origin

2010-02-10 Thread Carcharoth
On Wed, Feb 10, 2010 at 1:26 PM, David Gerard dger...@gmail.com wrote:
 On 10 February 2010 13:21, Andrew Gray andrew.g...@dunelm.org.uk wrote:

 I've sometimes thought that, in an ideal world, we should just phase
 out PD-old and all its forms - it's often, as you say, wishful
 thinking, or sometimes (and I know in my early days I did this) a
 cover for a misunderstanding about just what the thresholds are.
 So what'd we replace it with? Something functionally like...
 {{copyright
 |date=1895
 |location=Germany
 |author=anonymous
 }}
 ...and have it then spit out, well, this image is free under German
 copyright law (sect. 473 ii) and in the United States (Title 15, 7)
 or the like, with an option to click to have it generate a copyright
 status in Canada or France or where have you. We do *have* this data
 for a sizable proportion of our images, after all, and it's a bit lazy
 when we take all this and slap a well, PD, I guess rubber-stamp on
 it!
 I doubt this is *practical* in the near term, of course, but it's a
 thought. Any other ideas?

 I think this is a brilliant idea and would deal with the problem
 marvellously. And it should be reasonably easy to implement in an
 incremental manner without disruption.

 cc to commons-l - is there anything about this that'd be hard? Apart
 from going through a zillion images. The key point is it wouldn't
 disrupt anything existing.

The great thing about it, is that it encourages people to go to their
sources and find out what they *really* know about an image and its
origins and provenance, rather than just guessing and being an
armchair copyright lawyer. If you can find out something definite
about an image, and source it, then that is good. Though what to do
with circa dates, I'm not sure.

Carcharoth

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Re: [WikiEN-l] Images that are PD in their country of origin

2010-02-10 Thread Carcharoth
Oh, and a current example, if anyone is interested:

http://commons.wikimedia.org/wiki/Commons:Village_pump#Picture_upload_question

One of the big problems is finding out whether copyright was renewed,
but I'm not sure if the artwork in question was ever published in the
USA anyway. People miss nuances so easily. And how on Earth do you
find out details of an artist called David Barker?

Carcharoth

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Re: [WikiEN-l] Images that are PD in their country of origin

2010-02-09 Thread Cary Bass
-BEGIN PGP SIGNED MESSAGE-
Hash: SHA1

SlimVirgin wrote:
 On Mon, Feb 8, 2010 at 17:22, Michael Peel em...@mikepeel.net
 wrote:
 However, that is somewhat separate from the question of images
 that are in the public domain _somewhere_. It is somewhat crazy
 that US laws dictate what public domain materials you can upload
 to Wikipedia etc - irrespective of what laws apply in your own
 country.

 One possibility that might be worth investigating is something
 like Wikilivres - which holds books that are out of copyright in
 Canada (life+50 years) but not in the US. It can do that as its
 servers are based in Canada. Could we do something similar with
 Wikimedia Commons? i.e. host multimedia content on a server in a
 different geographical area, and then have that linked in with
 Wikipedia in the same way that Commons currently is?

 Or we could simply make a decision as a project to respect the
 copyrights and the terms of release of the countries of origin.

 I'm dealing with an image at the moment of Palestinian women
 refugees resting after being expelled from their homes as the
 Israeli army approached in 1948. It's in the public domain in
 Israel, which now controls the area in which the image was taken. I
 am 99.9 percent certain it was taken by an employee of the British
 War Office, which would make it public domain in Britain and the
 Commonwealth (and as far as the British are concerned that makes it
 PD everywhere). I sent off for an old first edition of a book I
 knew it had appeared in in the 1950s in the hope that it would
 explicitly credit the War Office, but sadly it doesn't.

 Because of that small doubt, I have to claim fair use. And because
 I am claiming fair use, someone has said I will have to reduce the
 quality of the image for it to comply with our fair-use policy.
 It's insane.
I'd like to point out that in fact, these images would be accepted on
to Commons, because Commons respects the country of origin rule rather
than the PD-US rule that more often applies on the English Wikipedia.

- --
Cary Bass
Volunteer Coordinator, Wikimedia Foundation

Support Free Knowledge: http://wikimediafoundation.org/wiki/Donate
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Re: [WikiEN-l] Images that are PD in their country of origin

2010-02-09 Thread SlimVirgin
On Tue, Feb 9, 2010 at 10:59, Cary Bass c...@wikimedia.org wrote:
 I'd like to point out that in fact, these images would be accepted on
 to Commons, because Commons respects the country of origin rule rather
 than the PD-US rule that more often applies on the English Wikipedia.

Hi Cary, most of the image people I've checked with say that images on the
Commons are supposed to be PD in their country of origin *and* in the U.S.
Although there are images on the Commons that are PD in their country of
origin but *not* in the U.S., they usually carry a tag that places the PD
status in doubt and may be proposed for deletion. This means we can't use
them on WP.

Look at this image for example.
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/File:Refugees_from_Lydda.jpg

Palestinian refugees in the British Mandate of Palestine during the exodus
from their homes after Israeli troops moved in, July 1948, photographer
unknown, believed to be from, or working on behalf of, the British War
Office. First publication date not known, but I do know it had been
published by 1957. It's PD in Israel, which now governs part of that land.
It's PD in Jordan, which governs the other part. 99.9 percent certain it's
PD in the UK, which governed the land at the time. But not clearly PD in the
U.S. It has therefore been proposed for deletion from the Commons.
http://commons.wikimedia.org/wiki/File:Refugees_from_Lydda.jpg

To use it on WP, I have to claim fair use, which means I'm expected to
deliberately reduce its quality. :)

Here is an official British War Office image from the 1940s, definitely
taken before 1951.
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/File:King_Abdullah_of_Jordan_and_John_Glubb_Bagot.jpg
David Gerard got the British govt to confirm years ago that these are
regarded as PD worldwide. But not clearly PD in the U.S. because of the
January 1, 1996 rule; therefore we can't upload to Commons (safely) and
can't use in featured articles (safely).

The above are no means isolated examples. It seems to me that when we find
situations like this cropping up again and again, we have evidence of *reductio
ad absurdum*, evidence that the image policies are irrational, and way too
complex to expect editors to adhere to. All our content and behavioral
policies have to watch out for this -- if we find a content policy is trying
to force people to do things that everyone agrees are silly, we change the
policy.

But with the image policies, no matter the tangles we end up in, no matter
that we're basically telling every country in the world that they're not
allowed to order their own affairs, and no matter that there are no real
legal issues in the U.S. with images of this kind anyway, no sensible change
in the image policies is permitted. That's what confuses me. Is it just that
no one is bothering to sort them out, or is there resistance to it
somewhere? Is it Foundation-level, or what is it?

Sarah
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Re: [WikiEN-l] Images that are PD in their country of origin

2010-02-09 Thread Cary Bass
-BEGIN PGP SIGNED MESSAGE-
Hash: SHA1

SlimVirgin wrote:
 On Tue, Feb 9, 2010 at 10:59, Cary Bass c...@wikimedia.org wrote:

 I'd like to point out that in fact, these images would be
 accepted on to Commons, because Commons respects the country of
 origin rule rather than the PD-US rule that more often applies on
 the English Wikipedia.

 Hi Cary, most of the image people I've checked with say that images
 on the Commons are supposed to be PD in their country of origin
 *and* in the U.S. Although there are images on the Commons that are
 PD in their country of origin but *not* in the U.S., they usually
 carry a tag that places the PD status in doubt and may be proposed
 for deletion. This means we can't use them on WP.

 Look at this image for example.
 http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/File:Refugees_from_Lydda.jpg

 Palestinian refugees in the British Mandate of Palestine during the
 exodus from their homes after Israeli troops moved in, July 1948,
 photographer unknown, believed to be from, or working on behalf of,
 the British War Office. First publication date not known, but I do
 know it had been published by 1957. It's PD in Israel, which now
 governs part of that land. It's PD in Jordan, which governs the
 other part. 99.9 percent certain it's PD in the UK, which governed
 the land at the time. But not clearly PD in the U.S. It has
 therefore been proposed for deletion from the Commons.
 http://commons.wikimedia.org/wiki/File:Refugees_from_Lydda.jpg

Yes, of course I didn't make an exception to my comment, regarding
whether or not an image was first published in the United States. :-)
Foolish me for not pointing out the exceptions; however... this image
was published in 1957 without a copyright notice, making it public
domain in the US. I've noted that in the deletion discussion on Commons.

- --
Cary Bass
Volunteer Coordinator, Wikimedia Foundation

Support Free Knowledge: http://wikimediafoundation.org/wiki/Donate
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Re: [WikiEN-l] Images that are PD in their country of origin

2010-02-09 Thread Cary Bass
-BEGIN PGP SIGNED MESSAGE-
Hash: SHA1

Cary Bass wrote:
 SlimVirgin wrote:
 On Tue, Feb 9, 2010 at 10:59, Cary Bass c...@wikimedia.org
 wrote:

 I'd like to point out that in fact, these images would be
 accepted on to Commons, because Commons respects the country of
 origin rule rather than the PD-US rule that more often applies
 on the English Wikipedia.
 Hi Cary, most of the image people I've checked with say that
 images on the Commons are supposed to be PD in their country of
 origin *and* in the U.S. Although there are images on the Commons
 that are PD in their country of origin but *not* in the U.S.,
 they usually carry a tag that places the PD status in doubt and
 may be proposed for deletion. This means we can't use them on WP.


 Look at this image for example.
 http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/File:Refugees_from_Lydda.jpg

 Palestinian refugees in the British Mandate of Palestine during
 the exodus from their homes after Israeli troops moved in, July
 1948, photographer unknown, believed to be from, or working on
 behalf of, the British War Office. First publication date not
 known, but I do know it had been published by 1957. It's PD in
 Israel, which now governs part of that land. It's PD in Jordan,
 which governs the other part. 99.9 percent certain it's PD in the
 UK, which governed the land at the time. But not clearly PD in
 the U.S. It has therefore been proposed for deletion from the
 Commons.
 http://commons.wikimedia.org/wiki/File:Refugees_from_Lydda.jpg

 Yes, of course I didn't make an exception to my comment, regarding
 whether or not an image was first published in the United States.
 :-) Foolish me for not pointing out the exceptions; however... this
 image was published in 1957 without a copyright notice, making it
 public domain in the US. I've noted that in the deletion discussion
 on Commons.
Or does this fall under that crazy 1996 law...


- --
Cary Bass
Volunteer Coordinator, Wikimedia Foundation

Support Free Knowledge: http://wikimediafoundation.org/wiki/Donate
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Re: [WikiEN-l] Images that are PD in their country of origin

2010-02-09 Thread SlimVirgin
On Tue, Feb 9, 2010 at 12:07, Cary Bass c...@wikimedia.org wrote:


 Cary Bass wrote:
  On Tue, Feb 9, 2010 at 10:59, Cary Bass c...@wikimedia.org
  wrote:
 
  I'd like to point out that in fact, these images would be
  accepted on to Commons, because Commons respects the country of
  origin rule rather than the PD-US rule that more often applies
  on the English Wikipedia.



  Yes, of course I didn't make an exception to my comment, regarding
  whether or not an image was first published in the United States.
  :-) Foolish me for not pointing out the exceptions; however... this
  image was published in 1957 without a copyright notice, making it
  public domain in the US. I've noted that in the deletion discussion
  on Commons.

Or does this fall under that crazy 1996 law...

 It might fall under that, yes. It was published in 1957 without a copyright
notice, but may have been published before that with one. I don't know. Nor
do I know whether that matters.

It was regarded as copyrighted in its country of origin in 1996, I believe,
if we take that as Israel, because taken in 1948 (plus 50 = 1998); therefore
the crazy 1996 law may apply. If the country of origin is Jordan, I think
it's 1948 plus 25.

Thanks for saying something about it on the delete page anyway.

Sarah
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Re: [WikiEN-l] Images that are PD in their country of origin

2010-02-09 Thread Durova

 Yes, lack of good administrators is a big problem, but the policies that
 they administer would remain the same without regard to the number of
 administrators. A simpler formulation of the rules could ease the
 administrators' burdens. Alternatively, the solution is more administrators.

 When people tolerate copyright violation at featured processes in the name
of free culture or not being too doctrinaire, then that sets off a
domino effect that worsens the problem everywhere else.  If you'd like to
help solve that problem by becoming a Commons administrator, please do.


 I don't see complaints to the press as a big cause for worry.


One word: Siegenthaler.

I was really referring to deciding the edge cases where the existence of a
 valid copyright is debatable.

 People are prone to a lot of convenient errors in that regard.  This
frequently happens with the European PD-70 rule.  An editor locates a
photograph of a German ship that was built in 1895, republished without
photo credit.  The absence of photo credit doesn't mean that the
photographer was anonymous and a ship built in 1895 could have been
photographed at any time it was operational.  So if it was decommissioned in
1919 we can't assume that the photographer died within twenty years
afterward...or we shouldn't.

But we keep getting editors who use the PD-old template anyway as an
exercise in wishful thinking.  Too often, the existence of a valid
copyright is debatable becomes a euphemism for I've got a lousy source and
haven't done enough research.

-- 
http://durova.blogspot.com/
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Re: [WikiEN-l] Images that are PD in their country of origin

2010-02-08 Thread Ray Saintonge
SlimVirgin wrote:
 As you say, it's up to Wikipedia to formulate its own policy, so I'm
 wondering if that's being done anywhere, if there's an effort
 somewhere to clarify this.

   
The fact is that copyright issues have been a perpetual topic of debate 
throughout my eight years of participation. It all gets caught up in the 
confusion of the policy making process. That process tends to be too 
adversarial, sometimes with too little practical understanding of legal 
realities. At some point someone has to be trusted and respected enough 
to say These are our limits, and have it stick. This is a big 
challenge that extends well beyond the narrow topic of copyrights. 

This is more about the elusive qualities of leadership. As a society we 
have all been disillusioned by the actions of those in power at any and 
all levels. Our era of rapid communications has made those actions more 
difficult to hide. We find ourselves unable to trust anyone. At the same 
time most find it difficult to function without leadership, and crave 
the certainties which that leadership brings.

Ec

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Re: [WikiEN-l] Images that are PD in their country of origin

2010-02-08 Thread Ray Saintonge
Durova wrote:

 In summary, it's up to Wikipedia to adopt its own policies. Personally,
 I would avoid too doctrinaire an approach; I would more tend to assume
 that if one takes a fair-minded approach to including material with
 uncertain copyright status the worst that can happen is that some
 ghostly obscure heir will emerge from the woodwork to make his claims.
 More likely, he will thank us for reviving the memory of his dead 
 ancestor.

 Ec
   
With due respect toward Ray's very thoughtful analysis, I can't agree with 
that conclusion.

Wikimedia Commons currently has 276 administrators and over 6 million
images.  Compare that against en:wiki's 1,714 administrators and 3 million
articles and you'll get an idea how thinly things are spread.  Commons has a
serious deletion request backlog.

Experienced contributors--particularly at the featured content level--have
an obligation to set the example and put the best foot forward.  Yes, it can
be frustrating to research copyright.  It would be considerably more
frustrating if a copyright owner who didn't thank us for the appropriation
complained to the press.

About two years ago the featured picture program had an editor who was
nominating copyright violations and running a vote stacking sockfarm.  He
had actually gotten a copyvio promoted to featured picture before we
realized it; fortunately we caught onto the problem before it ran on the
main page.  Afterward a single administrator undid his siteban without
discussion.  Last fall he was banned again when he actually threatened
another editor.  During the noticeboard thread it turned out that he had
gone over to the DYK program and had resumed submitting copyvios
there--which apparently site culture was not doctrinaire enough about
addressing.

If a fellow who had already been sitebanned for copyvio can return and
continue copyvios for a year at a venue which runs on the main page, then
perhaps a more doctrinaire approach is exactly what we need.

-Lise

  

These are important consequences, but mostly begin to stray from the real issue.

Yes, lack of good administrators is a big problem, but the policies that they 
administer would remain the same without regard to the number of 
administrators. A simpler formulation of the rules could ease the 
administrators' burdens. Alternatively, the solution is more administrators.

I agree that experienced contributors need to set an example, but that too is 
within the rules as defined. Thus they too suffer from a lack of clear 
definition.  I don't see complaints to the press as a big cause for worry. 
Remember that we are dealing with works whose copyright status is debatable, 
and not just last year's pop trivia whose rights are very clear. If we 
rediscover something that hasn't seen the light of day for fifty years, the 
owner's beginning his complaints with the press would ring a little hollow if 
in all those fifty years he took no other steps to protect those rights.

The story of the badly-behaved editor doesn't help us either. What we do about 
such behaviour is about the application of policy, not about determining what 
that copyright policy in fact is. I would even venture to guess that the 
individual in question would have as enthusiastically violated a liberal 
copyright policy as a stringent one. I'm sorry if my use of the word 
doctrinaire misled you in that direction. I was really referring to deciding 
the edge cases where the existence of a valid copyright is debatable.

Ec



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Re: [WikiEN-l] Images that are PD in their country of origin

2010-02-08 Thread Ray Saintonge
David Gerard wrote:
 On 8 February 2010 00:16, Ian Woollard wrote:
   
 My understanding is that the Wikipedia doesn't really have any risk
 under the law.
 Provided the strictures of the DMCA are followed, any uploaded
 copyrighted material simply has to be removed promptly if they receive
 a copyright violation notice. If the strictures of the DMCA aren't
 followed then the Wikipedia/media could be in big trouble.
 
 The problem for Commons is also reusability - Wikimedia could get away
 with just about anything, but reusers may not.
   

I sometimes wonder whether reusability is the rope with which the 
free-culture movement hangs itself.

Ec

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Re: [WikiEN-l] Images that are PD in their country of origin

2010-02-08 Thread Michael Peel

On 8 Feb 2010, at 23:05, Ken Arromdee wrote:

 This is also a particular problem with pictures of living people,  
 since we've
 been told that since it's *possible* to take another picture of a  
 living
 person, all non-free images of living people are prohibited.  The  
 official
 way of interpreting it's possible to takes no consideration of  
 just how
 possible it is.  In any other context this would be considered  
 rules-lawyering--
 we're basically officially rules-lawyering our own policies.

Personally, I think we should remove all non-free images from all  
language Wikipedias (and everywhere else they occur) - as they make  
it difficult to get freely licensed content off people that already  
have that content. Case study: I emailed ESA to ask for a photograph  
of a satellite to use in an article; they provided a 200 pixel image  
I could use as 'fair use' in return. In the past, we weren't big  
enough to have any leverage to get that content released - but now we  
are, and we could have that leverage if we want to take advantage of it.

However, that is somewhat separate from the question of images that  
are in the public domain _somewhere_. It is somewhat crazy that US  
laws dictate what public domain materials you can upload to Wikipedia  
etc - irrespective of what laws apply in your own country.

One possibility that might be worth investigating is something like  
Wikilivres - which holds books that are out of copyright in Canada  
(life+50 years) but not in the US. It can do that as its servers are  
based in Canada. Could we do something similar with Wikimedia  
Commons? i.e. host multimedia content on a server in a different  
geographical area, and then have that linked in with Wikipedia in the  
same way that Commons currently is? There shouldn't be any concerns  
about having thumbnail images of these works on Wikipedia, as these  
are all done under fair use anyway (e.g. all of those uncredited CC- 
BY-SA images...).

Mike

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Re: [WikiEN-l] Images that are PD in their country of origin

2010-02-08 Thread SlimVirgin
On Mon, Feb 8, 2010 at 17:22, Michael Peel em...@mikepeel.net wrote:
 However, that is somewhat separate from the question of images that
 are in the public domain _somewhere_. It is somewhat crazy that US
 laws dictate what public domain materials you can upload to Wikipedia
 etc - irrespective of what laws apply in your own country.

 One possibility that might be worth investigating is something like
 Wikilivres - which holds books that are out of copyright in Canada
 (life+50 years) but not in the US. It can do that as its servers are
 based in Canada. Could we do something similar with Wikimedia
 Commons? i.e. host multimedia content on a server in a different
 geographical area, and then have that linked in with Wikipedia in the
 same way that Commons currently is?

Or we could simply make a decision as a project to respect the
copyrights and the terms of release of the countries of origin.

I'm dealing with an image at the moment of Palestinian women refugees
resting after being expelled from their homes as the Israeli army
approached in 1948. It's in the public domain in Israel, which now
controls the area in which the image was taken. I am 99.9 percent
certain it was taken by an employee of the British War Office, which
would make it public domain in Britain and the Commonwealth (and as
far as the British are concerned that makes it PD everywhere). I sent
off for an old first edition of a book I knew it had appeared in in
the 1950s in the hope that it would explicitly credit the War Office,
but sadly it doesn't.

Because of that small doubt, I have to claim fair use. And because I
am claiming fair use, someone has said I will have to reduce the
quality of the image for it to comply with our fair-use policy. It's
insane.

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Re: [WikiEN-l] Images that are PD in their country of origin

2010-02-07 Thread Ray Saintonge
SlimVirgin wrote:
 Can anyone help with an authoritative opinion about this? The doubts about
 it are causing problems on a number of articles, including during featured
 article reviews.

 Where an image is in the public domain in its country of origin, and that
 country is not the U.S., I believe we still have to show that it is PD in
 the U.S. before we can use it, because the Foundation's servers are in the
 U.S.. There seem to be widely differing views on this, even among
 Wikipedians who seem knowledgeable about images. Some people say that if the
 image was not copyrighted in its country of origin on January 1, 1996, it is
 regarded as PD in the U.S., and may be uploaded to the Commons and used on
 Wikipedia as PD. This is according to the [[Uruguay Round Agreements Act]].
 Others are saying no, this *may* mean they are in the public domain, but
 their status as such is not secure.

 So my first question is: if an image was regarded as in the public domain on
 January 1, 1996 in its (non-U.S.) country of origin, is there a consensus as
 to whether we are allowed to use it on Wikipedia as a PD image? If so, what
 is the correct tag to use?

 My second question: for images that are in the public domain in their
 (non-U.S.) country of origin, but were not PD in that country as of January
 1, 1996, is there any way we can use them apart from claiming fair use?
   
In examining this one needs to distinguish between Wikipedia policy and 
copyright law.  Wikipedia can establish its own policies, which largely, 
but not exclusively, tend to be more stringent that copyright law.  In 
that it can be authoritative; it chooses what level of risk to accept.

As long as you depend only on copyright law there can be no 
authoritative answer. The failure of the United States to adopt the rule 
of the shorter term throws everything into a muddle. Every situation 
needs to be studied on its own merits. The case is still working through 
the legal system challenging, on first amendment grounds, whether that 
law would operate to re-protect works that had already gone into the 
public domain. It seems clear that UK authors who died in 1923, 1924 or 
1925 would not have been captured by the URAA. In other cases much 
depends on how the law of some other country transitioned the extension 
of copyright from life plus fifty to seventy.  There are many possible 
permutations of that problem.

Canada still uses life plus fifty, and it's anybody's guess whether it 
will adopt the extension. The last couple controversial efforts to add 
DRMs did not include term extension language. Stephen Leacock died in 
1945 so his works would have gone into the public domain in Canada at 
the end of 1995; nevertheless some later works were published in the US, 
and the copyrights duly renewed at the appropriate time.

Images present additional problems about who owns the copyright.  The 
simple fact that an image was included in a book does not automatically 
mean that the book's author owned the copyrights for the images.  For 
the Winnie the Pooh books Shepherd, the illustrator, outlived Milne by a 
considerable margin so in a life plus system the copyrights on the 
images would last much longer than those on the texts.

In summary, it's up to Wikipedia to adopt its own policies. Personally, 
I would avoid too doctrinaire an approach; I would more tend to assume 
that if one takes a fair-minded approach to including material with 
uncertain copyright status the worst that can happen is that some 
ghostly obscure heir will emerge from the woodwork to make his claims. 
More likely, he will thank us for reviving the memory of his dead ancestor.

Ec

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Re: [WikiEN-l] Images that are PD in their country of origin

2010-02-07 Thread SlimVirgin
On Sun, Feb 7, 2010 at 16:35, Ray Saintonge sainto...@telus.net wrote:
 SlimVirgin wrote:
 So my first question is: if an image was regarded as in the public domain on
 January 1, 1996 in its (non-U.S.) country of origin, is there a consensus as
 to whether we are allowed to use it on Wikipedia as a PD image? If so, what
 is the correct tag to use?

 My second question: for images that are in the public domain in their
 (non-U.S.) country of origin, but were not PD in that country as of January
 1, 1996, is there any way we can use them apart from claiming fair use?

 In summary, it's up to Wikipedia to adopt its own policies. Personally,
 I would avoid too doctrinaire an approach; I would more tend to assume
 that if one takes a fair-minded approach to including material with
 uncertain copyright status the worst that can happen is that some
 ghostly obscure heir will emerge from the woodwork to make his claims.
 More likely, he will thank us for reviving the memory of his dead ancestor.

 Ec

Thanks, Ray. The difficulties are arising at featured-article image
reviews, where we try to stick closely to the image policies, but no
one seems to understand what the policies say exactly when it comes to
this issue. So editors who are using images that are PD in their
country of origin are encountering different opinions depending on who
conducts the review, which is frustrating. Someone writing an article
about Australia is not able to use a picture of Australia that is PD
in Australia, which seems wrong for an international project.

As you say, it's up to Wikipedia to formulate its own policy, so I'm
wondering if that's being done anywhere, if there's an effort
somewhere to clarify this.

Sarah

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Re: [WikiEN-l] Images that are PD in their country of origin

2010-02-07 Thread Durova


 In summary, it's up to Wikipedia to adopt its own policies. Personally,
 I would avoid too doctrinaire an approach; I would more tend to assume
 that if one takes a fair-minded approach to including material with
 uncertain copyright status the worst that can happen is that some
 ghostly obscure heir will emerge from the woodwork to make his claims.
 More likely, he will thank us for reviving the memory of his dead ancestor.

 Ec

 With due respect toward Ray's very thoughtful analysis, I can't agree with
that conclusion.

Wikimedia Commons currently has 276 administrators and over 6 million
images.  Compare that against en:wiki's 1,714 administrators and 3 million
articles and you'll get an idea how thinly things are spread.  Commons has a
serious deletion request backlog.

Experienced contributors--particularly at the featured content level--have
an obligation to set the example and put the best foot forward.  Yes, it can
be frustrating to research copyright.  It would be considerably more
frustrating if a copyright owner who didn't thank us for the appropriation
complained to the press.

About two years ago the featured picture program had an editor who was
nominating copyright violations and running a vote stacking sockfarm.  He
had actually gotten a copyvio promoted to featured picture before we
realized it; fortunately we caught onto the problem before it ran on the
main page.  Afterward a single administrator undid his siteban without
discussion.  Last fall he was banned again when he actually threatened
another editor.  During the noticeboard thread it turned out that he had
gone over to the DYK program and had resumed submitting copyvios
there--which apparently site culture was not doctrinaire enough about
addressing.

If a fellow who had already been sitebanned for copyvio can return and
continue copyvios for a year at a venue which runs on the main page, then
perhaps a more doctrinaire approach is exactly what we need.

-Lise

-- 
http://durova.blogspot.com/
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Re: [WikiEN-l] Images that are PD in their country of origin

2010-02-07 Thread Ian Woollard
On 07/02/2010, Ray Saintonge sainto...@telus.net wrote:
 In examining this one needs to distinguish between Wikipedia policy and
 copyright law.  Wikipedia can establish its own policies, which largely,
 but not exclusively, tend to be more stringent that copyright law.  In
 that it can be authoritative; it chooses what level of risk to accept.

My understanding is that the Wikipedia doesn't really have any risk
under the law.

Provided the strictures of the DMCA are followed, any uploaded
copyrighted material simply has to be removed promptly if they receive
a copyright violation notice. If the strictures of the DMCA aren't
followed then the Wikipedia/media could be in big trouble.

 Ec

-- 
-Ian Woollard

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Re: [WikiEN-l] Images that are PD in their country of origin

2010-02-07 Thread David Gerard
On 8 February 2010 00:16, Ian Woollard ian.wooll...@gmail.com wrote:

 My understanding is that the Wikipedia doesn't really have any risk
 under the law.
 Provided the strictures of the DMCA are followed, any uploaded
 copyrighted material simply has to be removed promptly if they receive
 a copyright violation notice. If the strictures of the DMCA aren't
 followed then the Wikipedia/media could be in big trouble.


The problem for Commons is also reusability - Wikimedia could get away
with just about anything, but reusers may not.


- d.

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Re: [WikiEN-l] Images that are PD in their country of origin

2010-02-07 Thread George Herbert
On Sun, Feb 7, 2010 at 4:28 PM, David Gerard dger...@gmail.com wrote:
 On 8 February 2010 00:16, Ian Woollard ian.wooll...@gmail.com wrote:

 My understanding is that the Wikipedia doesn't really have any risk
 under the law.
 Provided the strictures of the DMCA are followed, any uploaded
 copyrighted material simply has to be removed promptly if they receive
 a copyright violation notice. If the strictures of the DMCA aren't
 followed then the Wikipedia/media could be in big trouble.


 The problem for Commons is also reusability - Wikimedia could get away
 with just about anything, but reusers may not.

The reality of the situation for reusers is that they are unlikely to
be held liable for significant damages if they have plausible reason
to believe they were using the image legally, and react appropriately
if the owner informs them differently.

It is practically impossible to in the legal sense prove the
provenance of images you didn't produce yourself, as a reuser.
Everyone assumes the bundled provenance is accurate, or at least not
fraudulent.  The systems in the US and elsewhere protect those who
rely on provenance they have available.

That does not mean we shouldn't pay attention to the problem.  But we
shouldn't let it cripple us.

Wikipedia's policy of generally being stricter (in policy, and
enforcement) than legal requirements in the US should help protect us
and our downstreams.  We should not get lazy and rely on that, but we
also should not be too defensive or paranoid.


-- 
-george william herbert
george.herb...@gmail.com

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Re: [WikiEN-l] Images that are PD in their country of origin

2010-02-07 Thread SlimVirgin
On Sun, Feb 7, 2010 at 18:28, David Gerard dger...@gmail.com wrote:
 The problem for Commons is also reusability - Wikimedia could get away
 with just about anything, but reusers may not.

What kind of reusers do we have in mind? The reason I ask is that the
image policies are crippling, or the way they're being applied is.
I've lost count of the number of times Holocaust images are proposed
for deletion because, we're told, there's a free equivalent somewhere.
Prisoners risked their lives in concentration camps to smuggle out
images to prove to the world what was happening, images that are PD in
their country of origin, yet we're not supposed to use them (in the
opinion of some Wikipedians) because they're not PD in the U.S. and
there might be a free equivalent somewhere. If this is happening to
make things easier for reusers, it would be good to know who they are
and what this kind of policy application protects them from, because
all it does is cause problems for us.

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Re: [WikiEN-l] Images that are PD in their country of origin

2010-02-07 Thread Carcharoth
On Mon, Feb 8, 2010 at 2:05 AM, SlimVirgin slimvir...@gmail.com wrote:
 On Sun, Feb 7, 2010 at 18:28, David Gerard dger...@gmail.com wrote:
 The problem for Commons is also reusability - Wikimedia could get away
 with just about anything, but reusers may not.

 What kind of reusers do we have in mind? The reason I ask is that the
 image policies are crippling, or the way they're being applied is.
 I've lost count of the number of times Holocaust images are proposed
 for deletion because, we're told, there's a free equivalent somewhere.
 Prisoners risked their lives in concentration camps to smuggle out
 images to prove to the world what was happening, images that are PD in
 their country of origin, yet we're not supposed to use them (in the
 opinion of some Wikipedians) because they're not PD in the U.S. and
 there might be a free equivalent somewhere. If this is happening to
 make things easier for reusers, it would be good to know who they are
 and what this kind of policy application protects them from, because
 all it does is cause problems for us.

Possibly the reusers who stick images on T-shirts and mugs and sell them?

Carcharoth

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Re: [WikiEN-l] Images that are PD in their country of origin

2010-02-07 Thread SlimVirgin
On Sun, Feb 7, 2010 at 20:24, Carcharoth carcharot...@googlemail.com wrote:
 On Mon, Feb 8, 2010 at 2:05 AM, SlimVirgin slimvir...@gmail.com wrote:
 What kind of reusers do we have in mind? The reason I ask is that the
 image policies are crippling, or the way they're being applied is.
 I've lost count of the number of times Holocaust images are proposed
 for deletion because, we're told, there's a free equivalent somewhere.
 Prisoners risked their lives in concentration camps to smuggle out
 images to prove to the world what was happening, images that are PD in
 their country of origin, yet we're not supposed to use them (in the
 opinion of some Wikipedians) because they're not PD in the U.S. and
 there might be a free equivalent somewhere. If this is happening to
 make things easier for reusers, it would be good to know who they are
 and what this kind of policy application protects them from, because
 all it does is cause problems for us.

 Possibly the reusers who stick images on T-shirts and mugs and sell them?

I can't tell whether that's a serious answer. I hope we're not making
editors jump through all these hoops, and depriving readers of
important historical images, for the benefit of people who sell
T-shirts. :(

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Re: [WikiEN-l] Images that are PD in their country of origin

2010-02-07 Thread Liam Wyatt
On Mon, Feb 8, 2010 at 2:37 PM, SlimVirgin slimvir...@gmail.com wrote:

 On Sun, Feb 7, 2010 at 20:24, Carcharoth carcharot...@googlemail.com
 wrote:
  On Mon, Feb 8, 2010 at 2:05 AM, SlimVirgin slimvir...@gmail.com wrote:
  What kind of reusers do we have in mind? The reason I ask is that the
  image policies are crippling, or the way they're being applied is.
  I've lost count of the number of times Holocaust images are proposed
  for deletion because, we're told, there's a free equivalent somewhere.
  Prisoners risked their lives in concentration camps to smuggle out
  images to prove to the world what was happening, images that are PD in
  their country of origin, yet we're not supposed to use them (in the
  opinion of some Wikipedians) because they're not PD in the U.S. and
  there might be a free equivalent somewhere. If this is happening to
  make things easier for reusers, it would be good to know who they are
  and what this kind of policy application protects them from, because
  all it does is cause problems for us.
 
  Possibly the reusers who stick images on T-shirts and mugs and sell them?

 I can't tell whether that's a serious answer. I hope we're not making
 editors jump through all these hoops, and depriving readers of
 important historical images, for the benefit of people who sell
 T-shirts. :(


I believe the answer is serious in as much as the most contested (but
allowed) re-use-cases of Commons content are for commercial purposes. It is
a use-case that is both difficult to explain to many copyright holders but
also important for us to retain as a standard for our free-culture project.

I agree that it is annoying to think of commons admins going to all this
trouble just for the benefit of unknown people selling t-shirts, but if
people *aren't* allowed to sell t-shirts then it's not free-culture project.


For the record, I agree with George Herbert (above): We should not get lazy
and rely on [legal requirements in the US], but we also should not be too
defensive or paranoid. As they say about Fair Use - use it or lose it!

-Liam [[witty lama]]
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