Re: [Wikimedia-l] Fwd: [Commons-l] FOP in Europe: does this include WWII monuments with art?

2013-03-03 Thread Jane Darnell
After discussing this issue with the daughter of a Dutch WWII veteran
(yes, she's old!) I have come to the conclusion that the logic for
handling photos of artwork on Dutch WWII memorials should follow the
same rationale as this one:
http://commons.wikimedia.org/wiki/Commons:Deletion_requests/Image:Boy_Scout_Memorial-27527.jpg

In that discussion, the whole category for the Washington, DC Vietnam
memorial was nominated for deletion, see here:
http://commons.wikimedia.org/wiki/Special:WhatLinksHere/Category:Vietnam_Veterans_Memorial
The last word on that discussion was I called the Smithsonian and the
Park Service about this. Aside from laughing, they were confused why
anyone would assume that the copyright was owned by anyone except the
USGov, or that it wan't in the PD. I can't get anyone on the record
about this.

I would go so far as to assume that the same is true for Dutch WWII
memorials, and if we cannot come up with a good way of preserving
Dutch WWII memorial images for the Dutch Wikimedia community to use in
any Wikipedia project (so not just the NL wiki), then I propose a
Dutch Wikipedia blackout on May 4th out of protest, since obviously
the only hindrance is the fear of Wikimedia Commons users that they
will be legally pursued, and I assume that this fear is real enough
that we can go public with it.

On a personal level, as a Dutch citizen, I would be willing to be the
first to be tried legally on such an issue, and after my discussion
this morning, I believe I could crowd source my legal fees with
support from the Dutch Wikipedia community.

Jane

2013/3/3, Lodewijk lodew...@effeietsanders.org:
 However, the location of the servers wasn't the topic of the original
 discussion :) So jumping back to that: Is there already a clear outcome on
 the Commons community regarding the possible deletion of images that are
 legal in the country of origin but might not be permitted under US
 copyright law?

 Lodewijk

 2013/3/3 Fae faewik+comm...@gmail.com

 On 3 March 2013 06:50, James Alexander jameso...@gmail.com wrote:
  On Sat, Mar 2, 2013 at 3:59 AM, Tobias Oelgarte 
  tobias.oelga...@googlemail.com wrote:
 
  The problem are not the European laws. It are the US laws that don't
  recognize the European FOP. That means it would be perfectly legal to
 host
  such images on an European server (in a country that recognizes FOP),
 but
  not on US servers, because they are subject to US law.
 
 
   I'm sorry, I keep seeing this argument and while I can understand the
  basic idea every time I see it I feel like little kitten dies. There is
 no
  doubt that the US FOP laws are a little insane and that the EU ones are
  generally much more lenient, however, it is obviously far far more
  complectated then that. There are plenty of EU laws which would are
  applicable to site/image hosting which are far more complicated and
 harder
  (or impossible) for us to follow. Overall the laws in the US have still
  tended to be much much better to host, and that doesn't even get into
  the
  problem of hosting in multiple locations and still trying to serve to a
  site hosted (or with staff) in the US.

 *No kittens were harmed during this discussion*

 We should keep an open mind, and the location of the servers to
 support the global movement should be reviewed and seen to be reviewed
 on a periodic basis, if nothing else international law, economics and
 political stability, changes every year. By default, we would never
 change unless there were jolly good reasons to justify the hassle and
 expense; though folks are always going to enjoy challenging the status
 quo, which is probably a healthy thing and the kittens get their
 dinners regardless.

 Cheers,
 Fae

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Re: [Wikimedia-l] Fwd: [Commons-l] FOP in Europe: does this include WWII monuments with art?

2013-03-03 Thread Fae
On 3 March 2013 12:10, Jane Darnell jane...@gmail.com wrote:
...
 In that discussion, the whole category for the Washington, DC Vietnam
 memorial was nominated for deletion, see here:
 http://commons.wikimedia.org/wiki/Special:WhatLinksHere/Category:Vietnam_Veterans_Memorial
 The last word on that discussion was I called the Smithsonian and the
 Park Service about this. Aside from laughing, they were confused why
 anyone would assume that the copyright was owned by anyone except the
 USGov, or that it wan't in the PD. I can't get anyone on the record
 about this.

 I would go so far as to assume that the same is true for Dutch WWII
 memorials, and if we cannot come up with a good way of preserving
 Dutch WWII memorial images for the Dutch Wikimedia community to use in
 any Wikipedia project (so not just the NL wiki), then I propose a
 Dutch Wikipedia blackout on May 4th out of protest, since obviously
 the only hindrance is the fear of Wikimedia Commons users that they
 will be legally pursued, and I assume that this fear is real enough
 that we can go public with it.

 On a personal level, as a Dutch citizen, I would be willing to be the
 first to be tried legally on such an issue, and after my discussion
 this morning, I believe I could crowd source my legal fees with
 support from the Dutch Wikipedia community.

Hi Jane,

I know it's all rather frustrating. I suggest a common sense approach
to the Commons community. There are a few rather good copyright
wikilawyers that dominate the discussion on Commons, the primary way
of handling them (us?) is to make sure that there is (i) clear policy
or agreed guidelines and (ii) legal clarification and external advice
where this would be helpful. Our critical wikilawyers do not make the
law, but they do help highlight how daft it can be at times. :-)

Now, in the *real world*, there is unlikely to be any issue were the
GLAM project you envisage to upload 1,000 or 100,000 images. A tiny
percentage will be deleted for various reasons, as a matter of course,
no matter how hard you try to run detailed guidelines. The idea that
such a project either must not proceed, or would be judged a failure
by the Wikimedia community, were a single image to be a potential
copyright problem, is not feasible, and we do not want such great
projects to be paralysed for fear of criticism because we have not got
full answers to every possible risk. The key Commons policy to
consider is the Precautionary Principle, so long as there are no
*significant* doubts with regard to copyright, then this indicates it
is perfectly okay to upload images where one has taken simple and
obvious precautions.[1]

Commons benefits from another great community approach, that of
staying mellow, you may want to take the Smithsonian's approach and
laugh most of this away. I suggest rather than brinkmanship and
calling for black-outs and legal cases, you consider different avenues
of community consultation, such as relevant questions on the village
pump, the copyright noticeboard and set up a GLAM Commons WikiProject
page for long term guidelines for your project members to discuss and
improve. With such consultation banked, it would be hard for anyone to
come along later and criticise you for not trying to address the issue
and reach a practical conclusion.[2][3][4][5]

My viewpoint is as a well known Wikimedia Commons contributor with
40,000+ image uploads, 600,000+ edits and over 1.2 million further
edits by bot. Oh, and I do other more important stuff too. :-D

Links
1. 
http://commons.wikimedia.org/wiki/Commons:Project_scope/Precautionary_principle
2. http://commons.wikimedia.org/wiki/Commons:Staying_mellow
3. http://commons.wikimedia.org/wiki/Commons:GLAM
4. http://commons.wikimedia.org/wiki/Commons:Village_pump/Copyright
5. http://commons.wikimedia.org/wiki/Commons:Village_pump

Cheers,
Fae
-- 
fae...@gmail.com http://j.mp/faewm
Guide to email tags: http://j.mp/mfae

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Re: [Wikimedia-l] Fwd: [Commons-l] FOP in Europe: does this include WWII monuments with art?

2013-03-02 Thread James Alexander
On Sat, Mar 2, 2013 at 3:59 AM, Tobias Oelgarte 
tobias.oelga...@googlemail.com wrote:

 The problem are not the European laws. It are the US laws that don't
 recognize the European FOP. That means it would be perfectly legal to host
 such images on an European server (in a country that recognizes FOP), but
 not on US servers, because they are subject to US law.


 I'm sorry, I keep seeing this argument and while I can understand the
basic idea every time I see it I feel like little kitten dies. There is no
doubt that the US FOP laws are a little insane and that the EU ones are
generally much more lenient, however, it is obviously far far more
complectated then that. There are plenty of EU laws which would are
applicable to site/image hosting which are far more complicated and harder
(or impossible) for us to follow. Overall the laws in the US have still
tended to be much much better to host, and that doesn't even get into the
problem of hosting in multiple locations and still trying to serve to a
site hosted (or with staff) in the US.

James

(Personal opinion, not a lawyer and not said as a staff member)
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