CZ Talk:Images/Archive 1

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Revision as of 15:36, 16 September 2007 by imported>Stephen Ewen (→‎About authority over image policy questions)
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Fair use category needed

We need a "Fair use" category. I suggest we adopt the Chicago Manual of Style (15th ed 2003) guidelines in ch 4 section 4.74-4.84. Note that Wiki limits its usefulness by rejecting fair use images. They have an odd reason for doing this (to protect future for-profit repackagers who do not currently exist). Our goal should be to emulate the academic world fair use practices, which maximize the benefits to the republic of letters.

Thanks, Richard. Please do continue to voice helpful things concerning the direction CZ should take in this matter. My own current thinking on the matter: 1) free licenses, first, of course, the freer the better; failing this 2) use by permission, even if copyright all rights reserved; failing this 3) fair use. I am thinking it is preferable for CZ to use "fair use" images instead by permission whenever possible, and let re-users deal with the fair use matter concerning those same images. All subject to change as things get actually hammered out! —–Stephen Ewen 02:19, 16 April 2007 (CDT)
I've watched Wiki get into a terrible bind because it wants to be totally "free." (Free that is for all possible downstream users--people in strange lands who do not yet exist.) That means Wiki editors are NOT free to use the fair use provisions. That's one important reason i've switched to CZ. Richard Jensen 04:04, 16 April 2007 (CDT)

And believe you me, I watched the same mess and wish to avoid it! But what do you think about this notion I am talking about?

  1. Free, if possible
  2. Permission to use copyrighted material over fair use, if possible
  3. Fair use, if unavoidable

Then we'd allow downstream users to make their own decisions about the by-permission images. This idea does not ban fair use, allows you to choose a considerably better by-permission image over a "free" one, but says you should first start your efforts at the level of free. One little article where free was not possible, yet where fair use has been completely avoided for by-permission, is BSD Daemon. Click all the images and look at the permission page.

Stephen Ewen 11:15, 16 April 2007 (CDT)

Stephen. I agree with your scheme. Most of my work is on history articles where items are over 30 years old and permissions are impossible to get. Richard Jensen 15:44, 16 April 2007 (CDT)

The process of forwarding a "fair use" policy will look more like 1) formulating a policy; 2) having one or preferably several lawyers review it, 3) revising it; 4) posting it. Please do not unilaterally change policies that are legal in nature. Please do continue to offer input, however! Stephen Ewen 04:08, 19 April 2007 (CDT)

This is NOT A POLICY. It's a code for fair use images. I recommend we adopt the Chicago Manual of Style policies --used by many university pressesand journals. Richard Jensen 22:13, 19 April 2007 (CDT)

Note on copyright when uploading

I suggest we should place a note on the copyright not only in this help page, but directly in the page that opens when one uploads the image. Something like a list of licenses, among which the contributor can choose, or just a copy of this help appearing in the "upload file" procedure. I would do it myself... but I don't know how!

--Nereo Preto 02:04, 16 April 2007 (CDT)

Only techs can edit that. I had them edit it some weeks ago. See Special:Upload. —–Stephen Ewen 02:09, 16 April 2007 (CDT)

To read about libre licenses

Stephen Ewen 20:20, 30 April 2007 (CDT)

copied from WP?

This help page has many WP-exclusive references like "commons (Wikimedia Commons), is it copied from there? Yi Zhe Wu 18:58, 8 June 2007 (CDT)

Yes, I'd like to know the answer to that question too. --Larry Sanger 11:54, 16 September 2007 (CDT)


Text here was removed by the Constabulary on grounds that it is needlessly inflammatory. (The author may replace this template with an edited version of the original remarks.)

Unanimously seems to be overstating the case, but perhaps there is room for a little compromise on both sides? Certainly it was wrong to lock out someone on the basis of such a disagreement. With great power comes great responsibility etc etc. Seems to be recognized now. And courtesy is to be treasured in a collaborative project. Courtesy is surely what this disagreement is about, in its origin?
A question was raised above about fair use and I can't find where it's yet been addressed. TIA -- luke 02:00, 16 September 2007 (CDT)
I replied on your talk page Luke.  —Stephen Ewen (Talk) 02:19, 16 September 2007 (CDT)

About authority over image policy questions

Here are some general principles and relevant facts. Many of these are obvious. I just wanted to point them out.

  1. Stephen Ewen is the presumptive leader of a Media Assets Workgroup. This is the case because (1) he's applied for the job (and the only one), (2) he has taken an enormous amount of time working out mostly if not wholly sensible media policies, (3) he has personally uploaded and gotten permissions for enormous amounts of media content, and (4) he's described a fairly reasonable Media Assets Workgroup, even if we might disagree on a few points (I don't know for sure).
  2. The responsibility for CZ content rests in the hands of the Editorial Council, as a general rule.
  3. Consequently, the Media Assets Workgroup, if it is to exist, must be a working committee of the Editorial Council.
  4. The responsibility for CZ legal policies rests in my hands and that of the Executive Committee, due to issues of legal liability.
  5. Where legal policies are unclear, or where my opinion is that there is no legal question at issue, I am content to let the Editorial Council debate and decide the matter. Even when there is a legal question at issue, I'll ask for advice from the Council and indeed from the community as a whole.
  6. Constables have the authority to enforce, not to establish, only certain points of image policy, just as they have the authority to enforce only certain points of article policy. In both cases, the Constabulary may enforce really obvious violations of policy.
  7. Steve, when formulating or enforcing image policy, is acting as presumptive leader of the Media Assets Workgroup, not as a constable. Due to typical division of power concerns, he must resign from the Constabulary once he joins the MAW officially.
  8. Richard Jensen has some authority over image policy and enforcement in the History Workgroup, because he is both an editor and a member of the Editorial Council.
  9. Neither Steve nor Richard has adequate authority over these issues to single-handedly establish what our policy shall be. By design, I don't even have such authority.
  10. If Steve and Richard disagree either about what our policy should be, or how it should be interpreted in some particular case, since we don't yet have a well-established dispute resolution mechanism, they should (1) approach me to settle the issue provisionally, and then (2) ask the Editorial Council to vote on the issue.
  11. Particularly in a strongly collaborative wiki project, like this one, it is crucial that anyone wielding any sort of authority be open to civil debate. This requires, among other things, that people who engage in such debate behave professionally, and that they make efforts to demonstrate that they understand what the other side is saying, even if they disagree.
  12. Moreover, it is crucial that persons who formulate policy--as I have been doing, and as Steve has done for our media policy--go out of their way to seek comments on the policy, and to respond to those comments sensitively and with full attention.

--Larry Sanger 13:08, 16 September 2007 (CDT)

I agree with Larry's points. Richard Jensen 13:16, 16 September 2007 (CDT)

2. The responsibility for CZ content rests in the hands of the Editorial Council, as a general rule.

At this point, however, it has serious legitimacy issues that I suggest is behind the question, "where are all the authors?". the EC has no balance to their power, except the EIC. The power that workgroups have is ZERO in relation to the EC. The power authors have is ZERO, as well. The EC may micromanage the project, as their powers are not delimited. Also, there is a person or two in it --there is not other way to really say this--whose character just does not support the weight of their crown.

3. Consequently, the Media Assets Workgroup, if it is to exist, must be a working committee of the Editorial Council.

This is, of course, admitting that the MAW may be micromanaged. Nothing works when micromanaged. The MAW must be a workgroup on par as any other workgroup, with responsibility over content: how media is displayed on media pages (the upload pages) and within articles by way of credit lines.

4. The responsibility for CZ legal policies rests in my hands and that of the Executive Committee, due to issues of legal liability. ::A crucial issue that needs settling is if CZ will be a publisher of content or a mere service provider in vein as provided for the Digital Millennium Act. Since none of this is defined, and if push comes to shove, an offended party can go after anyone with proximity to the issue: Larry, EC members, uploaders of media content, me as a de facto media person, and constables are all fully fair game. For I think obviously wise reasons, I have been operating under the safe assumption that CZ will be viewed as a publisher for both media able to be re-used and media content in its articles (think PLoS). If it is to be settled and stated within its public legal disclaimers that CZ is a mere service provider (think Wikipedia and YouTube or Internet Forums), then there can be considerable media anarchy, given rapid response to removing offending media when it is brought to an official designee of CZ. If it is to be a mere service provider, unconcerned about people's ability to peruse CZ for media to reuse, I hereby scrap the proposal for the MAW altogether. It just won't be needed.

Other than that, I agree too.

 —Stephen Ewen (Talk) 15:36, 16 September 2007 (CDT)