On 10/28/2010 2:56 PM, Gerard Meijssen wrote:
> Hoi,
> I am writing a series of blog posts about Commons. My aim is to 
> identify the issues that I have with how it functions. There are 
> several and I do not bother to write about the ones that are being 
> tackled by the team around Guillaume (as far as it is clear to me what 
> they are doing).
     I have to admit that I strongly disagree with the blog post

http://ultimategerardm.blogspot.com/2010/10/stimulating-commons-stock-photo.html

     I think that photoshopped images like that one about Dyslexia have 
no place anywhere around wikipedia.  An image like that just screams 
"lie",  "false" and "designed to manipulate your emotions";  I see that 
and I think of a cheezy informerical for a phonics program that's going 
to cure your kid's dyslexia,  or some foundation that takes donations to 
support the lifestyles of the people who run it.  It's fundamentally 
dishonest.

     I'm not saying there's no art in that kind of thing,  or that it 
doesn't have a place,  but it's not in Wikipedia.  If I saw this photo on

http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Dyslexia

     I'd remove it.  In my mind,  images used on Wikipedia need to be 
veridical,  which not all commercial illustration is (or needs to be.)

     As for the project of "better organizing images" that doesn't 
necessarily have to be done inside Commons,  where a consensus-based 
culture might inhibit the ability to get things done.  I'm taking a 
crack at it at

http://ookaboo.com/

     That site is nowhere near where I plan it to be in a year,  and in 
the long term it's going to take images in from other sources,  but at 
the moment it's basically a collection of commons images organized a 
different way.  I've got more navigational axes under development.

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