Re: [Wikimediauk-l] We need to talk to the public catalogue foundation

2011-07-06 Thread Roger Bamkin
This is an interesting debate. The fact that these tags are being placed on
1700 year old paintings undermines the value of copyright claims that are
legally enforceable. We must ensure that we are respecting the law in a
clear way even if very questionable claims are being made. Paintings are
copyright in the UK for 70 years after authors death. Wikimedia has been
clear that it does not believe that you can re-image to get a copyright
which some UK GLAMs do in a very ordered way. They obviously believe that
this may create some new rights. Logic tells me this cannot be true as it
makes the 70 year rule a mockery.

If we go to court then we need to go at someone elses invitation. Our job at
present I think is to influence public opinion so that when the law is
changed then it moves in our direction. We can do this by not breaking the
70 year rule (ever) and by honouring attribution (always) and by challenging
these claims. This is our cultural heritage and someone with a camera cannot
claim they made it.

rant over
Roger

On 6 July 2011 05:00, geni geni...@gmail.com wrote:

 Hmm their tagging system also has issues. Rather than allowing you to
 tag the paintings of your choice (the ones you actually know something
 about). You have to tag paintings that are randomly presented to you.


 --
 geni

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Re: [Wikimediauk-l] We need to talk to the public catalogue foundation

2011-06-24 Thread Thomas Dalton
On 23 June 2011 21:05, Andy Mabbett a...@pigsonthewing.org.uk wrote:
 With respect, no. We need to persuade our legislators to change
 copyright law so this doesn't happen.

Do we? Where does the law actually stand on things like this? My
understanding is that it is still unclear. A test-case in court might
be useful, even if it does go against us. Once the current law is
clarified, we can campaign for a change in the law (or not, if it
isn't needed).

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Re: [Wikimediauk-l] We need to talk to the public catalogue foundation

2011-06-24 Thread David Gerard
On 24 June 2011 12:30, Thomas Dalton thomas.dal...@gmail.com wrote:
 On 23 June 2011 21:05, Andy Mabbett a...@pigsonthewing.org.uk wrote:

 With respect, no. We need to persuade our legislators to change
 copyright law so this doesn't happen.

 Do we? Where does the law actually stand on things like this? My
 understanding is that it is still unclear. A test-case in court might
 be useful, even if it does go against us. Once the current law is
 clarified, we can campaign for a change in the law (or not, if it
 isn't needed).


I wouldn't be so quick to resolve things in law before we need to,
while we can still slant the situation on the ground.


- d.

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[Wikimediauk-l] We need to talk to the public catalogue foundation

2011-06-23 Thread geni
The public catalog foundation has been busy digitising the nation's
art. All those paintings held by government institutions and local
councils. Pretty nice. Their website is here:

http://thepcf.org.uk

and the paintings can be found here:

http://www.bbc.co.uk/arts/yourpaintings/

Some very nice stuff there.

Unfortunately they claim copyright. My favorite example is this. It's
a Fayum mummy portrait about 1700 years old:

http://www.bbc.co.uk/arts/yourpaintings/paintings/portrait-of-a-lady-31089

And yet if we open up the meta data:

Copyright Victoria and Albert Museum / Supplied by The Public
Catalogue Foundation This image is copyrighted.


The artist for this painting

http://www.bbc.co.uk/arts/yourpaintings/paintings/the-launching-of-hms-royal-sovereign-at-portsmouth-25-apri25872

died 1873 and yet we open up the meta data and

Copyright Hampshire County Council Museums Service / Supplied by The
Public Catalogue Foundation. This image is copyrighted.

The rest of the text runs:

The Public Catalogue Foundation is committed to respecting the
intellectual property rights of others. The copyright in paintings and
images reproduced by the Public Catalogue Foundation belong to a
variety of organisations and individuals including the collections
that own the paintings and third party rights holders. Permitted Use
of This Image: This image and data related to the image may be
reproduced for non-commercial research and private study purposes. For
ALL  other uses other than those outlined above, including commercial
uses, users should contact, in the first instance, the contributing
collection using the contact information provided on the Your
Paintings website. Where the underlying painting is in copyright,
further permissions will also be needed. Protection of Image
Copyright: This image is protected with a secure invisible digital
watermark that allows the Public Catalogue Foundation to identify
unauthorized use of the image. Further Information: Any queries should
be addressed to copyrightoffi...@thepcf.org.uk


Lovey. We could just ignore this and let the Americans take care of
matters but it might be smarter to stage an intervention before we get
NPG mark 2.


-- 
geni

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Re: [Wikimediauk-l] We need to talk to the public catalogue foundation

2011-06-23 Thread Michael Peel
I've met with them several times; as you can see, the discussions didn't get 
very far...

Mike

On 23 Jun 2011, at 20:56, geni wrote:

 The public catalog foundation has been busy digitising the nation's
 art. All those paintings held by government institutions and local
 councils. Pretty nice. Their website is here:
 
 http://thepcf.org.uk
 
 and the paintings can be found here:
 
 http://www.bbc.co.uk/arts/yourpaintings/
 
 Some very nice stuff there.
 
 Unfortunately they claim copyright. My favorite example is this. It's
 a Fayum mummy portrait about 1700 years old:
 
 http://www.bbc.co.uk/arts/yourpaintings/paintings/portrait-of-a-lady-31089
 
 And yet if we open up the meta data:
 
 Copyright Victoria and Albert Museum / Supplied by The Public
 Catalogue Foundation This image is copyrighted.
 
 
 The artist for this painting
 
 http://www.bbc.co.uk/arts/yourpaintings/paintings/the-launching-of-hms-royal-sovereign-at-portsmouth-25-apri25872
 
 died 1873 and yet we open up the meta data and
 
 Copyright Hampshire County Council Museums Service / Supplied by The
 Public Catalogue Foundation. This image is copyrighted.
 
 The rest of the text runs:
 
 The Public Catalogue Foundation is committed to respecting the
 intellectual property rights of others. The copyright in paintings and
 images reproduced by the Public Catalogue Foundation belong to a
 variety of organisations and individuals including the collections
 that own the paintings and third party rights holders. Permitted Use
 of This Image: This image and data related to the image may be
 reproduced for non-commercial research and private study purposes. For
 ALL  other uses other than those outlined above, including commercial
 uses, users should contact, in the first instance, the contributing
 collection using the contact information provided on the Your
 Paintings website. Where the underlying painting is in copyright,
 further permissions will also be needed. Protection of Image
 Copyright: This image is protected with a secure invisible digital
 watermark that allows the Public Catalogue Foundation to identify
 unauthorized use of the image. Further Information: Any queries should
 be addressed to copyrightoffi...@thepcf.org.uk
 
 
 Lovey. We could just ignore this and let the Americans take care of
 matters but it might be smarter to stage an intervention before we get
 NPG mark 2.
 
 
 -- 
 geni
 
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Re: [Wikimediauk-l] We need to talk to the public catalogue foundation

2011-06-23 Thread Brian McNeil
Let's be blunt; when someone in the US decides to take copies of all
images where the paintings have entered the public domain, they will not
be able to do a thing about it.

Organisations should not need beaten over the head with Bridgeman vs
Corel; but, someone will do it.

On Thu, 2011-06-23 at 20:59 +0100, Michael Peel wrote:
 I've met with them several times; as you can see, the discussions didn't get 
 very far...
 
 Mike
 
 On 23 Jun 2011, at 20:56, geni wrote:
 
  The public catalog foundation has been busy digitising the nation's
  art. All those paintings held by government institutions and local
  councils. Pretty nice. Their website is here:
  
  http://thepcf.org.uk
  
  and the paintings can be found here:
  
  http://www.bbc.co.uk/arts/yourpaintings/
  
  Some very nice stuff there.
  
  Unfortunately they claim copyright. My favorite example is this. It's
  a Fayum mummy portrait about 1700 years old:
  
  http://www.bbc.co.uk/arts/yourpaintings/paintings/portrait-of-a-lady-31089
  
  And yet if we open up the meta data:
  
  Copyright Victoria and Albert Museum / Supplied by The Public
  Catalogue Foundation This image is copyrighted.
  
  
  The artist for this painting
  
  http://www.bbc.co.uk/arts/yourpaintings/paintings/the-launching-of-hms-royal-sovereign-at-portsmouth-25-apri25872
  
  died 1873 and yet we open up the meta data and
  
  Copyright Hampshire County Council Museums Service / Supplied by The
  Public Catalogue Foundation. This image is copyrighted.
  
  The rest of the text runs:
  
  The Public Catalogue Foundation is committed to respecting the
  intellectual property rights of others. The copyright in paintings and
  images reproduced by the Public Catalogue Foundation belong to a
  variety of organisations and individuals including the collections
  that own the paintings and third party rights holders. Permitted Use
  of This Image: This image and data related to the image may be
  reproduced for non-commercial research and private study purposes. For
  ALL  other uses other than those outlined above, including commercial
  uses, users should contact, in the first instance, the contributing
  collection using the contact information provided on the Your
  Paintings website. Where the underlying painting is in copyright,
  further permissions will also be needed. Protection of Image
  Copyright: This image is protected with a secure invisible digital
  watermark that allows the Public Catalogue Foundation to identify
  unauthorized use of the image. Further Information: Any queries should
  be addressed to copyrightoffi...@thepcf.org.uk
  
  
  Lovey. We could just ignore this and let the Americans take care of
  matters but it might be smarter to stage an intervention before we get
  NPG mark 2.
  
  
  -- 
  geni
  
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-- 
Brian McNeil.
-- 
brian.mcn...@wikinewsie.org | Wikinews Accredited Reporter.
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Facts don't cease to be facts, but news ceases to be news.


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