Re: [WikiEN-l] NY Times: Wired Editor Apologizes for Copying from Wikipedia in New Book

2009-06-29 Thread Durova
A more proactive approach would be very welcome where it comes to featured
pictures.  WMF photographers have occasionally discovered their work reused
without credit in commercial advertising.

-Durova

On Sun, Jun 28, 2009 at 3:24 PM, Andrew Turvey andrewrtur...@googlemail.com
 wrote:

  Steve Bennett stevag...@gmail.com wrote:

  After my recent perusals of reuses of my images, here's my take:
 
  No one is ever going to pay attention to, let alone understand, let
  alone respect, let alone follow the CC-BY or GFDL requirement for
  credit. Soon, we will stop asking for it.
 
  In order for it to happen, we would have to:
  a) Make the requirement really really prominent
  b) Respect it ourselves
  c) Vehemently complain in a very public manner when a few individuals
  fail to do so.
 
  when d) we have far bigger fish to fry.

 Open question: do you think the Foundation and/or local chapters should
 complain more when their local media fail to respect Wikimedia copyrights?

 Andrew
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Re: [WikiEN-l] NY Times: Wired Editor Apologizes for Copying from Wikipedia in New Book

2009-06-29 Thread David Gerard
2009/6/28 Andrew Turvey andrewrtur...@googlemail.com:

 Open question: do you think the Foundation and/or local chapters should 
 complain more when their local media fail to respect Wikimedia copyrights?


I think actively asking nicely would be a good idea. Particularly when
several people ask them. Eventually they will get the idea: FREE STOCK
PHOTOS just give credit and licence.


- d.

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Re: [WikiEN-l] NY Times: Wired Editor Apologizes for Copying from Wikipedia in New Book

2009-06-29 Thread geni
2009/6/29 David Gerard dger...@gmail.com:
 2009/6/28 Andrew Turvey andrewrtur...@googlemail.com:

 Open question: do you think the Foundation and/or local chapters should 
 complain more when their local media fail to respect Wikimedia copyrights?


 I think actively asking nicely would be a good idea. Particularly when
 several people ask them. Eventually they will get the idea: FREE STOCK
 PHOTOS just give credit and licence.

Only if you consider CC-BY-SA to be weak copyleft.

-- 
geni

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Re: [WikiEN-l] NY Times: Wired Editor Apologizes for Copying from Wikipedia in New Book

2009-06-29 Thread geni
2009/6/29 David Gerard dger...@gmail.com:
 2009/6/29 geni geni...@gmail.com:
 2009/6/29 David Gerard dger...@gmail.com:

 I think actively asking nicely would be a good idea. Particularly when
 several people ask them. Eventually they will get the idea: FREE STOCK
 PHOTOS just give credit and licence.

 Only if you consider CC-BY-SA to be weak copyleft.


 Do let us know how taking them to court for using your stuff works out.

In the UK the case would be extremely unlikely to ever reach court.
Due to the way copyright is treated by UK courts unless you are very
sure of you case it's almost always cheaper to throw say £50-100 at
the person then never use their work again.

In practice you can argue it either way.

The critical line of the license is:

Each constituting separate and independent works in themselves

So I suspect it would be fairly easy to defend say a random sports pic
as long as you CCed the caption but if the pic is referred to within
the article it is a bit hard to see how the article would count as an
independent work
-- 
geni

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Re: [WikiEN-l] NY Times: Wired Editor Apologizes for Copying from Wikipedia in New Book

2009-06-26 Thread David Gerard
2009/6/25 phoebe ayers phoebe.w...@gmail.com:

 We give people a lovely pre-made citation on each and every page!
 Every major style manual includes explicit directions on how to cite
 websites! Every academic paper ever published about Wikipedia has
 grappled with this problem and come up with some sort of solution!
 Sheesh.


I asked him directly on his blog what was so difficult about citing us
and what we could do to make it easier. I look forward to a response.


- d.

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Re: [WikiEN-l] NY Times: Wired Editor Apologizes for Copying from Wikipedia in New Book

2009-06-25 Thread Charles Matthews
Joseph Reagle wrote:
 On Wednesday 24 June 2009, Charles Matthews wrote:
   
 Somewhat cynical: they thought they could just cite, looked at the GFDL 
 and thought damn, doesn't work that way, and then just went ahead. 
 

 Particularly ironic given the title and perhaps subject of the book.
   
My comment was written late at night. But I don't really understand why 
the author thought (a) permalinks are uncool, but (b) paraphrasing this 
WP stuff and passing it off as my own and copyright is clearly cool. And 
issues this as an apology.

Charles



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Re: [WikiEN-l] NY Times: Wired Editor Apologizes for Copying from Wikipedia in New Book

2009-06-25 Thread Steve Bennett
On Thu, Jun 25, 2009 at 8:16 AM, Durovanadezhda.dur...@gmail.com wrote:
 Any suggestions what to do about this?


After my recent perusals of reuses of my images, here's my take:

No one is ever going to pay attention to, let alone understand, let
alone respect, let alone follow the CC-BY or GFDL requirement for
credit. Soon, we will stop asking for it.

In order for it to happen, we would have to:
a) Make the requirement really really prominent
b) Respect it ourselves
c) Vehemently complain in a very public manner when a few individuals
fail to do so.

when d) we have far bigger fish to fry.

I think ultimately most organisations divide media into two
categories: properietary or free. We can certainly label all our
material as proprietary and tell people not to reuse it. Or we can
tell people they can reuse it. But our message of please reuse it,
but  is not going to get through.

And why do you care anyway? Vanity? Curiosity? Is it that important?
Is a little piece of text on some idiot's webpage the difference
between you contributing your time next time and not? Is the
gratification of your name in cyberspace your primary motivation for
producing useful free images?

(These questions are rhetorical and deliberately inflammatory. Take
the bait with caution.)

Steve

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Re: [WikiEN-l] NY Times: Wired Editor Apologizes for Copying from Wikipedia in New Book

2009-06-25 Thread Siobhan Hansa
Steve Bennett wrote:
...
 And why do you care anyway? Vanity? Curiosity? Is it that important?
 Is a little piece of text on some idiot's webpage the difference
 between you contributing your time next time and not? Is the
 gratification of your name in cyberspace your primary motivation for
 producing useful free images?
 
 (These questions are rhetorical and deliberately inflammatory. Take
 the bait with caution.)


A less ego bound reason* for wanting to see some acknowledgment - 
especially through a link to Wikipedia or the like - is that it is 
advocacy for the intellectual commons. This could encourage others to 
get involved or to consider making their content free.

Also if the importance of free content isn't widely understood it will 
be harder for policy makers to come to good decisions about laws or 
other public support that might impact it.

Siobhan

*Not that I think there's anything wrong with wanting to see your name 
in lights - vanity can be a big motivator.

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Re: [WikiEN-l] NY Times: Wired Editor Apologizes for Copying from Wikipedia in New Book

2009-06-25 Thread Joseph Reagle
On Thursday 25 June 2009, Charles Matthews wrote:
 My comment was written late at night. But I don't really understand why 
 the author thought (a) permalinks are uncool, but (b) paraphrasing this 
 WP stuff and passing it off as my own and copyright is clearly cool. And 
 issues this as an apology.

I agree, permalinks are the way to go. However, I can sympathize with the 
ugliness of permalinks and access requirements, which are standard Chicago. If 
you have more than one Web resource referenced in a note (if you don't want 
every sentence to have a footnote), it's really difficult to read:

[[
53. Wikipedia, “Wikipedia:Neutral Point of View,” Wikimedia, September 16, 
2004, http://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=Wikipedia: Neutral point of 
view  oldid = 6042007 (accessed March 5, 2004); Wikipedia, “Wikipedia:Neutral 
Point of View,” Wikimedia, November 3, 2008, 
http://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=Wikipedia: Neutral point of 
viewoldid=249390830 (accessed November 3, 2008).
...
63. Wikipedia, “Wikipedia:Neutral Point of View (oldid=249390830).”
]] 

In the context of the two Chicago notes variants, I've made the following 
experiment in my manuscript:

1. Long (end) notes upon first instance (including URL) and subsequent short 
notes (with version number noted in title of Wikipedia pages, such as in note 
63 above) subsequently yields 396 pages.
2. Short (end) notes (such as note 63 above) followed by bibliography with full 
citation (including URL) yields 452 pages.

Option 2 is more readable, but requires a redirection by the reader if they 
want full bibliographic detail, and adds pages (and weight and cost) to a book. 
Another option is to use an adaptation of Option 1: standard long-then-short 
Chicago without URLs, which are provided online. This make a practical sort of 
sense (and this is what Anderson *says* he was planning to do), but is 
non-standard and I'm not sure how it would be received.

*However*, this difficulty doesn't mean that one should simply write through 
one's sources (whatever that means) and remove the attribution all together.



This thread also inspired a blog post:
  http://reagle.org/joseph/blog/method/anderson-and-citing-wikipedia

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Re: [WikiEN-l] NY Times: Wired Editor Apologizes for Copying from Wikipedia in New Book

2009-06-25 Thread David Gerard
2009/6/25 Siobhan Hansa helens...@gmail.com:
 Steve Bennett wrote:

 And why do you care anyway? Vanity? Curiosity? Is it that important?
 Is a little piece of text on some idiot's webpage the difference
 between you contributing your time next time and not? Is the
 gratification of your name in cyberspace your primary motivation for
 producing useful free images?
 (These questions are rhetorical and deliberately inflammatory. Take
 the bait with caution.)

 A less ego bound reason* for wanting to see some acknowledgment -
 especially through a link to Wikipedia or the like - is that it is
 advocacy for the intellectual commons. This could encourage others to
 get involved or to consider making their content free.
 Also if the importance of free content isn't widely understood it will
 be harder for policy makers to come to good decisions about laws or
 other public support that might impact it.


Yes. It will help the commons considerably for free content licenses
to visibly be out there and acknowledged. And it's not onerous for a
newspaper to print Photo by , CC by-sa 3.0. Or even Photo by
xxx, restored by xxx, even if the restoration wouldn't generate a
fresh copyright.


- d.

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Re: [WikiEN-l] NY Times: Wired Editor Apologizes for Copying from Wikipedia in New Book

2009-06-25 Thread Andrew Gray
2009/6/25 Joseph Reagle rea...@mit.edu:

 Option 2 is more readable, but requires a redirection by the reader if they
 want full bibliographic detail, and adds pages (and weight and cost) to a
 book. Another option is to use an adaptation of Option 1: standard
 long-then-short Chicago without URLs, which are provided online. This make
 a practical sort of sense (and this is what Anderson *says* he was planning
 to do), but is non-standard and I'm not sure how it would be received.

This reminds me of a thought I've been having for a while. *We* can
pro-actively take steps to make citation easier for our users, at
least in theory; we can provide more elegant URLs.

http://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=Wikipedia:Neutral_point_of_viewoldid=6042007

can be rendered as

http://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?oldid=6042007

Can we make that even more succinct? Well, we could take a leaf from
the DOI playbook, and set up something like:

http://[site]/wp:en/6042007

At first glance, this doesn't seem to actually add very much - it's
just a shorter URL. But we could then use it as a platform to help our
reusers...

a) if that revision is deleted, we could generate a page saying so and
identifying the next live revision *on that page*.

b) if one day we get a marvellous system for identifying authors, this
would be an obvious place to display the generated list of them for a
given revision.

I'd be curious as to any other applications people can think of.

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

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Re: [WikiEN-l] NY Times: Wired Editor Apologizes for Copying from Wikipedia in New Book

2009-06-25 Thread Joseph Reagle
On Thursday 25 June 2009, Charles Matthews wrote:
 [[TinyURL]], I would say. Do we take this into account in any advice 
 how to cite Wikipedia?

I would not make my references dependent upon a commercial service. (It's fine 
for Twitter in the short term, but what happens when they go under and now all 
those URLs point to porn?) However, institutions should give thought to their 
URI architecture, including stability, terseness, etc. The ACM provides a 
relatively short URL for everything it publishes, and there are other DOI 
services.

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Re: [WikiEN-l] NY Times: Wired Editor Apologizes for Copying from Wikipedia in New Book

2009-06-25 Thread Charles Matthews
Joseph Reagle wrote:
 On Thursday 25 June 2009, Charles Matthews wrote:
   
 My comment was written late at night. But I don't really understand why 
 the author thought (a) permalinks are uncool, but (b) paraphrasing this 
 WP stuff and passing it off as my own and copyright is clearly cool. And 
 issues this as an apology.
 

 I agree, permalinks are the way to go. However, I can sympathize with the 
 ugliness of permalinks and access requirements, which are standard Chicago. 
 If you have more than one Web resource referenced in a note (if you don't 
 want every sentence to have a footnote), it's really difficult to read:
   
[[TinyURL]], I would say. Do we take this into account in any advice 
how to cite Wikipedia?

Charles


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Re: [WikiEN-l] NY Times: Wired Editor Apologizes for Copying from Wikipedia in New Book

2009-06-25 Thread Charles Matthews
Joseph Reagle wrote:
 On Thursday 25 June 2009, Charles Matthews wrote:
   
 [[TinyURL]], I would say. Do we take this into account in any advice 
 how to cite Wikipedia?
 

 I would not make my references dependent upon a commercial service. (It's 
 fine for Twitter in the short term, but what happens when they go under and 
 now all those URLs point to porn?) However, institutions should give thought 
 to their URI architecture, including stability, terseness, etc. The ACM 
 provides a relatively short URL for everything it publishes, and there are 
 other DOI services.

   
So any particular reason the WMF couldn't provide its own [[URL 
shortening]] in-house? How hard is it to do a bares-bones service?

Charles



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Re: [WikiEN-l] NY Times: Wired Editor Apologizes for Copying from Wikipedia in New Book

2009-06-25 Thread Durova
There's an importance to this which needs to be communicated better, and
quickly.  Most of the world's image archives are not openly accessible.  As
some of them open their doors, Flickr is competing with Commons to become
the primary point of deposit.  We risk a situation where WMF loses out on
valuable institutional relationships and our volunteers glean the crumbs
from a commercial site.

One of the arguments in favor of Wikimedia Commons is that we have a team of
volunteers who restore historic material.  There's a chance for the donating
archive to get highlights from its collection designated as featured
pictures, which run on the main page.

The fact that our restorations get reproduced in Time Magazine, in Wired,
and elsewhere ought to be strengthening that argument.  Credibility requires
credit.  We are competing against a well funded commercial enterprise for
large institutional donations; we need every advantage we can muster.

-Durova

On Thu, Jun 25, 2009 at 8:34 AM, David Gerard dger...@gmail.com wrote:

 2009/6/25 Siobhan Hansa helens...@gmail.com:
  Steve Bennett wrote:

  And why do you care anyway? Vanity? Curiosity? Is it that important?
  Is a little piece of text on some idiot's webpage the difference
  between you contributing your time next time and not? Is the
  gratification of your name in cyberspace your primary motivation for
  producing useful free images?
  (These questions are rhetorical and deliberately inflammatory. Take
  the bait with caution.)

  A less ego bound reason* for wanting to see some acknowledgment -
  especially through a link to Wikipedia or the like - is that it is
  advocacy for the intellectual commons. This could encourage others to
  get involved or to consider making their content free.
  Also if the importance of free content isn't widely understood it will
  be harder for policy makers to come to good decisions about laws or
  other public support that might impact it.


 Yes. It will help the commons considerably for free content licenses
 to visibly be out there and acknowledged. And it's not onerous for a
 newspaper to print Photo by , CC by-sa 3.0. Or even Photo by
 xxx, restored by xxx, even if the restoration wouldn't generate a
 fresh copyright.


 - d.

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Re: [WikiEN-l] NY Times: Wired Editor Apologizes for Copying from Wikipedia in New Book

2009-06-25 Thread Joseph Reagle
On Thursday 25 June 2009, Andrew Gray wrote:
 http://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=Wikipedia:Neutral_point_of_viewoldid=6042007
 
 can be rendered as
 
 http://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?oldid=6042007
 
 Can we make that even more succinct? Well, we could take a leaf from
 the DOI playbook, and set up something like:
 
 http://[site]/wp:en/6042007

So the oldid's are globally unique (among a language subdomain)? If that's the 
case, the answer to Charles' question of how hard it is could be not hard at 
all. (Perhaps even doable with some simple Apache rewrites, but WP is a complex 
architecture.)

As an aside the MARC archivists we're very helpful to me so that I could easily 
cite conversations on this list by creating a email msgid referrer. So for 
example, one of Charles' earlier messages is:

http://marc.info/?i=4a433110.2000...@ntlworld.com

dereferences to:

http://marc.info/?l=wikien-lm=124591771510938

Granted, the msgid version is slightly longer, but it's stable (a lot of 
archives regenerate and break links) and corresponds to the thing in my mbox. 
Similar tricks can be done for identifiers. (At the W3C, we used shorter URIs 
to define algorithms, schema, and namespaces with the rewrite approach.)

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Re: [WikiEN-l] NY Times: Wired Editor Apologizes for Copying from Wikipedia in New Book

2009-06-25 Thread wjhonson
I want to remind everything that the issue as to why the URL's weren't 
included *supposedly* wasn't that the standard URL is too long, but 
rather just that one side wanted the timestamp as they say, and the 
other didn't.  Personally it sounds to me like they are completely 
fudging the situation.  That's just my opinion and you can't sue me 
over it :)

I really doubt that any reader (whatsoever) is going to laboriously 
type in the oldid in the first place to see that article as it was 
when it was quoted.  We can hardly even get anyone to cite to the 
historical articles in the first place or they do something weird like 
say accessed on... which doesn't do anything automagically anyway.

Any factoid worth quoting off-project is probably ref'fed anyway, and 
the full cite should include the underlying source as well making a 
cite to the historical version redundant it would seem to me.

That brings up another thing in my mind.  The ability to search the 
history of one article *solely*, or one single talk page history.  Can 
we do that?

Will





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Re: [WikiEN-l] NY Times: Wired Editor Apologizes for Copying from Wikipedia in New Book

2009-06-25 Thread Andrew Gray
2009/6/25 Joseph Reagle rea...@mit.edu:

 Can we make that even more succinct? Well, we could take a leaf from
 the DOI playbook, and set up something like:

 http://[site]/wp:en/6042007

 So the oldid's are globally unique (among a language subdomain)? If that's
 the case, the answer to Charles' question of how hard it is could be not
 hard at all. (Perhaps even doable with some simple Apache rewrites, but
 WP is a complex architecture.)

My understanding is that the revision id is globally unique for a
given wiki, yes. Handily, it also works for images - uploading an
image generates a new revision id for the description page, so we can
link to a specific version of the image without having to go for the
bare URL.

(When I noted [site] there, incidentally, I was thinking of something
which we manage inhouse, but operating through a new and shorter
domain name for simplicity.)

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

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Re: [WikiEN-l] NY Times: Wired Editor Apologizes for Copying from Wikipedia in New Book

2009-06-25 Thread wjhonson
This file says its in the public domain.

Yes Joe but.
Durova's point, with which I agree, is that they improperly cited their source.
They lifted the picture *from* Wikipedia, and then cited the underlying source.
This normally implies I actually went to the source and viewed the image 
directly there.
Which Durova has shown they did not.
In scholarship that is considered a no-no.? You must cite the source *YOU* 
actually used, not the source your source used.

Will Johnson







-Original Message-
From: Joseph Reagle 
To: wikien-l@lists.wikimedia.org
Sent: Wed, Jun 24, 2009 4:06 pm
Subject: Re: [WikiEN-l] NY Times: Wired Editor Apologizes for Copying from 
Wikipedia in New Book










On Wednesday 24 June 2009, Durova wrote:
 http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/File:Sfearthquake3b.jpg

This file says its in the public domain.

[[
Permission
 (Reusing this image)
Public domain
]]

[[
This work is in the public domain in the United States because it is a work of 
the United States Federal Government under the terms of Title 17, Chapter 1, 
Section 105 of the US Code. See Copyright.
...
]]

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Re: [WikiEN-l] NY Times: Wired Editor Apologizes for Copying from Wikipedia in New Book

2009-06-25 Thread Angela
On Fri, Jun 26, 2009 at 3:06 AM, Andrew Grayandrew.g...@dunelm.org.uk wrote:
 http://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=Wikipedia:Neutral_point_of_viewoldid=6042007

 can be rendered as

 http://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?oldid=6042007

 Can we make that even more succinct?

http://en.wikipedia.org/?oldid=6042007 also works. For book purposes,
this is already shorter than most URLs, so shouldn't need to be
shortened anymore which would remove information about where the link
goes.

Angela

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Re: [WikiEN-l] NY Times: Wired Editor Apologizes for Copying from Wikipedia in New Book

2009-06-25 Thread Joseph Reagle
On Thursday 25 June 2009, Angela wrote:
 http://en.wikipedia.org/?oldid=6042007 also works. For book purposes,
 this is already shorter than most URLs, so shouldn't need to be
 shortened anymore which would remove information about where the link
 goes.

I did not know that, that's great.

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Re: [WikiEN-l] NY Times: Wired Editor Apologizes for Copying from Wikipedia in New Book

2009-06-25 Thread Joseph Reagle
On Thursday 25 June 2009, wjhon...@aol.com wrote:
 Yes Joe but.
 Durova's point, with which I agree, is that they improperly cited their 
 source.
 They lifted the picture *from* Wikipedia, and then cited the underlying 
 source.
 This normally implies I actually went to the source and viewed the image 
 directly there.
 Which Durova has shown they did not.
 In scholarship that is considered a no-no.? You must cite the source *YOU* 
 actually used, not the source your source used.

True enough, and my point about Public Domain is really about copyright, and 
Durova's point was about plagiarism and credit. So I missed the mark. However, 
had I more carefully responded I would have expressed that I think I would've 
made the same mistake Wired made. I would've seen oh, this is in the public 
domain and oh, here is the source and and there's the author and gone 
happily on my way. My trusty copy of Chicago Manual of Style (15th) similarly 
only concerns itself with permissions for copyrighted illustrations and images. 
Plus, there's no cite this page links there to provide guidance. The Reusing 
this image link similarly says nothing.

So I expect this is in part a matter of education, and so we be very clear 
about we would want such things to be credited. Is this a mutual credit, does 
the second credit go to Durova or Wikipedia? (There's so much info on that 
page, it's quite easy to get confused.)

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Re: [WikiEN-l] NY Times: Wired Editor Apologizes for Copying from Wikipedia in New Book

2009-06-25 Thread phoebe ayers
On Thu, Jun 25, 2009 at 2:40 PM, Joseph Reaglerea...@mit.edu wrote:
 On Thursday 25 June 2009, Angela wrote:
 http://en.wikipedia.org/?oldid=6042007 also works. For book purposes,
 this is already shorter than most URLs, so shouldn't need to be
 shortened anymore which would remove information about where the link
 goes.

 I did not know that, that's great.

Perhaps this could be included as an output format under cite this
page? Provide the full permanent URL, then the short version for
citation purposes.

As an aside, what bugs me the most about this is that according to the
note reproduced in this story:
http://www.vqronline.org/blog/2009/06/23/chris-anderson-free/
Anderson said that All those are my screwups after we decided not to
run notes as planned, due to my inability to find a good citation
format for web sources…

We give people a lovely pre-made citation on each and every page!
Every major style manual includes explicit directions on how to cite
websites! Every academic paper ever published about Wikipedia has
grappled with this problem and come up with some sort of solution!
Sheesh.

-- Phoebe

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Re: [WikiEN-l] NY Times: Wired Editor Apologizes for Copying from Wikipedia in New Book

2009-06-25 Thread Brian
It's hard to imagine someone thinking I bet no one will notice if I just
paste in this paragraph from a Wikipedia article. At the same time, some
users, perhaps even some apparently sophisticated users, may misunderstand
just what exactly is meant by free encyclopedia. And not to his credit
directly, but certainly somewhat in his favor, it is simply not possible to
cite an article such that you refer to it exactly the way it looked on a
particular day. This is because there is no software that can use the
revision number to pull in the correct revision of templates etc.

There really isn't any excuse though. A URL suitable for use in a book can
be as short as Wikipedia.org/Article (you're redirected to the article after
5 seconds). That's really, minimal attribution - who wouldn't be able to
agree on that??:)

On Thu, Jun 25, 2009 at 4:53 PM, phoebe ayers phoebe.w...@gmail.com wrote:

 On Thu, Jun 25, 2009 at 2:40 PM, Joseph Reaglerea...@mit.edu wrote:
  On Thursday 25 June 2009, Angela wrote:
  http://en.wikipedia.org/?oldid=6042007 also works. For book purposes,
  this is already shorter than most URLs, so shouldn't need to be
  shortened anymore which would remove information about where the link
  goes.
 
  I did not know that, that's great.

 Perhaps this could be included as an output format under cite this
 page? Provide the full permanent URL, then the short version for
 citation purposes.

 As an aside, what bugs me the most about this is that according to the
 note reproduced in this story:
 http://www.vqronline.org/blog/2009/06/23/chris-anderson-free/
 Anderson said that All those are my screwups after we decided not to
 run notes as planned, due to my inability to find a good citation
 format for web sources…

 We give people a lovely pre-made citation on each and every page!
 Every major style manual includes explicit directions on how to cite
 websites! Every academic paper ever published about Wikipedia has
 grappled with this problem and come up with some sort of solution!
 Sheesh.

 -- Phoebe

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Re: [WikiEN-l] NY Times: Wired Editor Apologizes for Copying from Wikipedia in New Book

2009-06-25 Thread wjhonson

 One would *hope* (although I'm not sure I expect it) that a writer at Wired 
would know how to properly cite a primary reference through a secondary 
citation.? I don't think this is an issue with our page, it is standard 
practice when citing.? Some people are sloppy I agree, but when found out they 
should be also called out.? I expect that they probably just thought they could 
get away with it.? Lucky they have people like me to give them a slap-down ;)

Will




 


 

-Original Message-
From: Joseph Reagle rea...@mit.edu
To: wikien-l@lists.wikimedia.org
Cc: wjhon...@aol.com
Sent: Thu, Jun 25, 2009 2:38 pm
Subject: Re: [WikiEN-l] NY Times: Wired Editor Apologizes for Copying from 
Wikipedia in New Book










On Thursday 25 June 2009, wjhon...@aol.com wrote:
 Yes Joe but.
 Durova's point, with which I agree, is that they improperly cited their 
source.
 They lifted the picture *from* Wikipedia, and then cited the underlying 
source.
 This normally implies I actually went to the source and viewed the image 
directly there.
 Which Durova has shown they did not.
 In scholarship that is considered a no-no.? You must cite the source *YOU* 
actually used, not the source your source used.

True enough, and my point about Public Domain is really about copyright, and 
Durova's point was about plagiarism and credit. So I missed the mark. However, 
had I more carefully responded I would have expressed that I think I would've 
made the same mistake Wired made. I would've seen oh, this is in the public 
domain and oh, here is the source and and there's the author and gone 
happily on my way. My trusty copy of Chicago Manual of Style (15th) similarly 
only concerns itself with permissions for copyrighted illustrations and images. 
Plus, there's no cite this page links there to provide guidance. The Reusing 
this image link similarly says nothing.

So I expect this is in part a matter of education, and so we be very clear 
about 
we would want such things to be credited. Is this a mutual credit, does the 
second credit go to Durova or Wikipedia? (There's so much info on that page, 
it's quite easy to get confused.)



 

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Re: [WikiEN-l] NY Times: Wired Editor Apologizes for Copying from Wikipedia in New Book

2009-06-25 Thread Jussi-Ville Heiskanen
Steve Bennett wrote:
 On Thu, Jun 25, 2009 at 8:16 AM, Durovanadezhda.dur...@gmail.com wrote:
   
 Any suggestions what to do about this?

 

 After my recent perusals of reuses of my images, here's my take:

 No one is ever going to pay attention to, let alone understand, let
 alone respect, let alone follow the CC-BY or GFDL requirement for
 credit. Soon, we will stop asking for it.

 In order for it to happen, we would have to:
 a) Make the requirement really really prominent
 b) Respect it ourselves
 c) Vehemently complain in a very public manner when a few individuals
 fail to do so.

 when d) we have far bigger fish to fry.

 I think ultimately most organisations divide media into two
 categories: properietary or free. We can certainly label all our
 material as proprietary and tell people not to reuse it. Or we can
 tell people they can reuse it. But our message of please reuse it,
 but  is not going to get through.

 And why do you care anyway? Vanity? Curiosity? Is it that important?
 Is a little piece of text on some idiot's webpage the difference
 between you contributing your time next time and not? Is the
 gratification of your name in cyberspace your primary motivation for
 producing useful free images?

 (These questions are rhetorical and deliberately inflammatory. Take
 the bait with caution.)
   
I won't take the bait. I will throw in a larger and tastier
bait into the water instead. ;-)


Clearly we cannot take in GFDL only content any more,
but to what extent if any, should we prevent people from
adding in content previously published under CC-BY-SA?


Yours,

Jussi-Ville Heiskanen


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Re: [WikiEN-l] NY Times: Wired Editor Apologizes for Copying from Wikipedia in New Book

2009-06-25 Thread Jussi-Ville Heiskanen
Steve Bennett wrote:


 And why do you care anyway? Vanity? Curiosity? Is it that important?
 Is a little piece of text on some idiot's webpage the difference
 between you contributing your time next time and not? Is the
 gratification of your name in cyberspace your primary motivation for
 producing useful free images?
   
Heh, thinking about it, I *will* swallow the bait. :-)

Let me tell you a real story from my own life...

But before I do that, let me sort of eviscerate a bit
of the rhetoric there above. Primary motivation
is a bit of a red herring in terms of phrasing. There
is absolutely no need for something to be a primary
motivation, for it to be a net plus when put into the
scales as to it's utility.

...but now to my tale:

I committed the cardinal sin of writing a little bit
about the school I was attending at the time, albeit
as staff, not as a student. And in my defence the
school was one with a special mission (The Natural
Sciences, to be clear).

One of the teachers in the school brought up the
wikipedia article and who were in its history fully
unprompted by me, while we and some other people
were at the coffee table. I sort of mentioned the last
editor she mentioned, was me.

I did not make my initial edit to the article because
I thought somebody in the school would be impressed,
but when she clearly showed she was sort of impressed
to find out the editor was me, I have to admit, I do feel
a sort of heightened responsibility for that article and
am definitely motivated to look after it.


Yours,

Jussi-Ville Heiskanen


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Re: [WikiEN-l] NY Times: Wired Editor Apologizes for Copying from Wikipedia in New Book

2009-06-25 Thread Carcharoth
On Fri, Jun 26, 2009 at 12:10 AM, Brianbrian.min...@colorado.edu wrote:
 It's hard to imagine someone thinking I bet no one will notice if I just
 paste in this paragraph from a Wikipedia article. At the same time, some
 users, perhaps even some apparently sophisticated users, may misunderstand
 just what exactly is meant by free encyclopedia. And not to his credit
 directly, but certainly somewhat in his favor, it is simply not possible to
 cite an article such that you refer to it exactly the way it looked on a
 particular day. This is because there is no software that can use the
 revision number to pull in the correct revision of templates etc.

snip

This is indeed a problem. I've sometimes gone to an old version of a
page and thought this looks wrong, and then realised that the
templates I'm seeing are the current ones, not the old ones (the same
applies when an image has been overwritten or deleted and recreated).
Sometimes a screenshot or true archive version is needed as well. As
for software to detect dynamic parts of the page and to go and grab
(even from deleted revisions) the older version of that dynamic
element, surely *someone* can do that? On the other hand, the bit
about the older dynamic parts of the page having been deleted is a
real problem as well.

Imagine an old citation leading to a page version that somehow shows a
shock image. Some of our more creative vandals would have little
problem doing that, especially if the deleted page or template no
longer existed, or something clever was done with template coding.

Ultimately, if a page relies heavily on templates or images, a
screenshot or *real* permanent link is needed.

Carcharoth

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Re: [WikiEN-l] NY Times: Wired Editor Apologizes for Copying from Wikipedia in New Book

2009-06-24 Thread Durova
Wired also used one of my featured picture restorations without credit.

On Wed, Jun 24, 2009 at 2:15 PM, William King williamcarlk...@gmail.comwrote:


 http://mediadecoder.blogs.nytimes.com/2009/06/24/editor-of-wired-apologizes-for-copying-from-wikipedia-in-new-book/

 Chris Anderson, the author, summarized the situation in two words: Mea
 culpa.

 Your thoughts?

 William King (Willking1979)

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Re: [WikiEN-l] NY Times: Wired Editor Apologizes for Copying from Wikipedia in New Book

2009-06-24 Thread David Gerard
2009/6/24 Durova nadezhda.dur...@gmail.com:

 Wired also used one of my featured picture restorations without credit.


Credit for the original, or credit for the restoration?


- d.

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Re: [WikiEN-l] NY Times: Wired Editor Apologizes for Copying from Wikipedia in New Book

2009-06-24 Thread Charles Matthews
William King wrote:
 http://mediadecoder.blogs.nytimes.com/2009/06/24/editor-of-wired-apologizes-for-copying-from-wikipedia-in-new-book/

 Chris Anderson, the author, summarized the situation in two words: Mea 
 culpa.

   
Somewhat cynical: they thought they could just cite, looked at the GFDL 
and thought damn, doesn't work that way, and then just went ahead. 

Charles


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Re: [WikiEN-l] NY Times: Wired Editor Apologizes for Copying from Wikipedia in New Book

2009-06-24 Thread Durova
Slight correction.  It was Time Magazine that ran my Brandeis restoration
uncredited.  The one Wired ran uncredited was the San Francisco Earthquake
of 1906.

http://www.wired.com/science/discoveries/news/2008/04/dayintech_0418

Wired gives sole credit to the original source:
*Image: H.D. Chadwick/National Archives and Records Administration* * *


Here's my restoration:
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/File:Sfearthquake3b.jpg

The unrestored version:
http://commons.wikimedia.org/wiki/File:Sfearthquake3.jpg

Any suggestions what to do about this?

-Lise

On Wed, Jun 24, 2009 at 2:57 PM, David Gerard dger...@gmail.com wrote:

 2009/6/24 Durova nadezhda.dur...@gmail.com:

  Wired also used one of my featured picture restorations without credit.


 Credit for the original, or credit for the restoration?


 - d.

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Re: [WikiEN-l] NY Times: Wired Editor Apologizes for Copying from Wikipedia in New Book

2009-06-24 Thread Durova
Well, taking a first stab at this.  Here's my letter to Wired:


Per the recent New York Times admission that one of your editors plagiarized
content from Wikipedia uncredited, I respectfully request credit for media
work of mine that Wired has reproduced without credit.

http://mediadecoder.blogs.nytimes.com/2009/06/24/editor-of-wired-apologizes-for-copying-from-wikipedia-in-new-book/

This reproduces a photograph in the digitally restored version I generated
through painstaking restoration:

http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/File:Sfearthquake3b.jpg

My restoration of this image was selected as a featured picture, which
designates Wikipedia's best content.  It ran on Wikipedia's main page on 16
March 2008: one month before your uncredited reproduction of my volunteer
labor.

I seek no compensation other than credit.  Please post credit as follows:
Restoration by Lise Broer (Durova).

Thank you very much,

Lise Broer

San Diego, California.


On Wed, Jun 24, 2009 at 3:16 PM, Durova nadezhda.dur...@gmail.com wrote:

 Slight correction.  It was Time Magazine that ran my Brandeis restoration
 uncredited.  The one Wired ran uncredited was the San Francisco Earthquake
 of 1906.

 http://www.wired.com/science/discoveries/news/2008/04/dayintech_0418

 Wired gives sole credit to the original source:
 *Image: H.D. Chadwick/National Archives and Records Administration* * *


 Here's my restoration:
 http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/File:Sfearthquake3b.jpg

 The unrestored version:
 http://commons.wikimedia.org/wiki/File:Sfearthquake3.jpg

 Any suggestions what to do about this?

 -Lise


 On Wed, Jun 24, 2009 at 2:57 PM, David Gerard dger...@gmail.com wrote:

 2009/6/24 Durova nadezhda.dur...@gmail.com:

  Wired also used one of my featured picture restorations without credit.


 Credit for the original, or credit for the restoration?


 - d.

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Re: [WikiEN-l] NY Times: Wired Editor Apologizes for Copying from Wikipedia in New Book

2009-06-24 Thread wjhonson
As a brief aside, when you sign up at wired, they send you a 
verification email.
In that verification email... they paste your password.
Bizarre.  You'd think something like Wired would be a bit more 
security conscious than to do that.


-Original Message-
From: Durova nadezhda.dur...@gmail.com
To: English Wikipedia wikien-l@lists.wikimedia.org
Sent: Wed, Jun 24, 2009 3:28 pm
Subject: Re: [WikiEN-l] NY Times: Wired Editor Apologizes for Copying 
from Wikipedia in New Book










Well, taking a first stab at this.  Here's my letter to Wired:


Per the recent New York Times admission that one of your editors 
plagiarized
content from Wikipedia uncredited, I respectfully request credit for 
media
work of mine that Wired has reproduced without credit.

http://mediadecoder.blogs.nytimes.com/2009/06/24/editor-of-wired-apologizes-for-copying-from-wikipedia-in-new-book/

This reproduces a photograph in the digitally restored version I 
generated
through painstaking restoration:

http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/File:Sfearthquake3b.jpg

My restoration of this image was selected as a featured picture, which
designates Wikipedia's best content.  It ran on Wikipedia's main page 
on 16
March 2008: one month before your uncredited reproduction of my 
volunteer
labor.

I seek no compensation other than credit.  Please post credit as 
follows:
Restoration by Lise Broer (Durova).

Thank you very much,

Lise Broer

San Diego, California.


On Wed, Jun 24, 2009 at 3:16 PM, Durova nadezhda.dur...@gmail.com 
wrote:

 Slight correction.  It was Time Magazine that ran my Brandeis 
restoration
 uncredited.  The one Wired ran uncredited was the San Francisco 
Earthquake
 of 1906.

 http://www.wired.com/science/discoveries/news/2008/04/dayintech_0418

 Wired gives sole credit to the original source:
 *Image: H.D. Chadwick/National Archives and Records Administration* * 
*


 Here's my restoration:
 http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/File:Sfearthquake3b.jpg

 The unrestored version:
 http://commons.wikimedia.org/wiki/File:Sfearthquake3.jpg

 Any suggestions what to do about this?

 -Lise


 On Wed, Jun 24, 2009 at 2:57 PM, David Gerard dger...@gmail.com 
wrote:

 2009/6/24 Durova nadezhda.dur...@gmail.com:

  Wired also used one of my featured picture restorations without 
credit.


 Credit for the original, or credit for the restoration?


 - d.

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Re: [WikiEN-l] NY Times: Wired Editor Apologizes for Copying from Wikipedia in New Book

2009-06-24 Thread David Gerard
2009/6/24 Durova nadezhda.dur...@gmail.com:

 Well, taking a first stab at this.  Here's my letter to Wired:
 Per the recent New York Times admission that one of your editors plagiarized
 content from Wikipedia uncredited, I respectfully request credit for media
 work of mine that Wired has reproduced without credit.


Restoration is painstaking work on behalf of the cultural commons and
well worth encouraging and crediting.

It's a different question whether it can use the same big stick of
copyright that CC or GFDL can. Possibly not in the US, per Bridgeman
vs Corel. (Though any actual statement on the subject would have to be
in court.)

I would expect that asking nicely and encouraging credit of restorers
is the best that can be done at this stage, and that it strikes me as
worth doing.

I'm not entirely sure that I'd agree that not crediting a restorer
(when crediting the original) would count as plagiarism. That's a
different kettle of fish, I think.


- d.

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Re: [WikiEN-l] NY Times: Wired Editor Apologizes for Copying from Wikipedia in New Book

2009-06-24 Thread Joseph Reagle
On Wednesday 24 June 2009, Durova wrote:
 http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/File:Sfearthquake3b.jpg

This file says its in the public domain.

[[
Permission
 (Reusing this image)
Public domain
]]

[[
This work is in the public domain in the United States because it is a work of 
the United States Federal Government under the terms of Title 17, Chapter 1, 
Section 105 of the US Code. See Copyright.
...
]]

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Re: [WikiEN-l] NY Times: Wired Editor Apologizes for Copying from Wikipedia in New Book

2009-06-24 Thread Joseph Reagle
On Wednesday 24 June 2009, Charles Matthews wrote:
 Somewhat cynical: they thought they could just cite, looked at the GFDL 
 and thought damn, doesn't work that way, and then just went ahead. 

Particularly ironic given the title and perhaps subject of the book.

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Re: [WikiEN-l] NY Times: Wired Editor Apologizes for Copying from Wikipedia in New Book

2009-06-24 Thread Jussi-Ville Heiskanen
David Gerard wrote:
 2009/6/24 Durova nadezhda.dur...@gmail.com:

   
 Well, taking a first stab at this.  Here's my letter to Wired:
 Per the recent New York Times admission that one of your editors plagiarized
 content from Wikipedia uncredited, I respectfully request credit for media
 work of mine that Wired has reproduced without credit.
 


 Restoration is painstaking work on behalf of the cultural commons and
 well worth encouraging and crediting.

 It's a different question whether it can use the same big stick of
 copyright that CC or GFDL can. Possibly not in the US, per Bridgeman
 vs Corel. (Though any actual statement on the subject would have to be
 in court.)

 I would expect that asking nicely and encouraging credit of restorers
 is the best that can be done at this stage, and that it strikes me as
 worth doing.

 I'm not entirely sure that I'd agree that not crediting a restorer
 (when crediting the original) would count as plagiarism. That's a
 different kettle of fish, I think.

   

I agree. But on the moral rights angle, it does breach
the inalienable right of paternity to a work. Paternity
is there even for modifications.


Yours,

Jussi-Ville Heiskanen


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