Re: [Wikimedia-l] Harald bischoff advertising to make images for the wikimedia foundation and then suing users

2015-07-28 Thread WereSpielChequers
 I don't know whether this is a mistranslation in the title thread, but if this 
wikimedian is advertising to make images for the wikimedia foundation and 
then suing users that would seem to me a different thing to taking images for 
himself but releasing a CC-BY-SA version on Wikimedia Commons. That wouldn't 
make any difference if he was taking photos of mountains or wildlife, but if he 
is using the foundation's name to get access to celebrities then that would be 
different. Taking photos for himself but releasing a copy on Wikimedia Commons 
under CC-BY-SA is slightly different and someone who speaks his language might 
need to suggest that to him.

I would also be interested to know whether he is suing people who are taking 
the same interpretation of the CC licenses that Wikipedia uses, or only those 
who are not following the reuse guidelines in Wikipedia or Wikimedia Commons.

It isn't clear to me at present whether he is:

1 insisting on his undisputed licence rights
2 strictly enforcing licence rights which we acknowledge on at least one 
Wikimedia project and don't ourselves breach as a movement
3 enforcing licence rights which we acknowledge on at least one Wikimedia 
project but breach on another.

I and perhaps others whose German skills are like mine barely adequate to order 
a beer, would be grateful if a German speaker on this list could clarify this.

Regards

WereSpielChequers



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Re: [Wikimedia-l] Harald bischoff advertising to make images for the wikimedia foundation and then suing users

2015-07-28 Thread rupert THURNER
On Jul 28, 2015 9:37 AM, WereSpielChequers werespielchequ...@gmail.com
wrote:
 It isn't clear to me at present whether he is:

 1 insisting on his undisputed licence rights
 2 strictly enforcing licence rights which we acknowledge on at least one
Wikimedia project and don't ourselves breach as a movement
 3 enforcing licence rights which we acknowledge on at least one Wikimedia
project but breach on another.

Could you please give an example for the three, to make easier for people
not so acquainted with nuances of the English language?

Rupert
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Re: [Wikimedia-l] harald bischoff advertising to make images for the wikimedia foundation and then suing users

2015-07-26 Thread Steinsplitter Wiki
It looks to me like Harald Bischoff is making Money with this. If you google 
his Name,
you find a lot of Blogposts related his Abmahnungen [1].

According to jurablogs he is also sending such Abmahnungen when a link to the 
license text itself is missing [2].

Bischoff is sending the Abmahnungen though an Attorney which is asking the 
affected persons to sign a cease and desist letter. Apart from that the 
affected person is requested to pay for damages and attorneys fees[2].

The complains are all over the web, this is imho a very bad reputation for 
wiki(p/m)edia.
I am wondering if his behavior is violating the terms of use.

Regards,
Steinsplitter

[1] https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Abmahnung
[2] 
http://www.jurablogs.com/2015/04/28/abmahnung-wegen-unberechtigter-bildnutzung-des-herrn-harald-bischoff-auch-ins-ausland
[3] 
https://www.betterplace.org/de/fundraising-events/freiheitsliebe-abmahnung-durch-bischoff
 

On Mon, Jul 20, 2015 at 10:07 AM, rupert THURNER rupert.thurner at gmail.com
wrote:
 hi,

 may i propose to fix the attribution problem for the one common use
 case do it like wikipedia does. somebody who refers to images from
 commons like wikipedia does it should be on legal safe grounds.

 there is a recent incident of non-wiki-love where user harald bischoff
 states comes into situations where pictures for the WMF are created,
 here:


 https://de.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=Benutzer:Haraldbischoffdiff=prevoldid=143679802
 komme ich regelmässig in Situationen in denen auch das eine oder
 andere Foto für die wikimedia-foundation

 harald bischoff then uploads these pictures with cc-by-sa-3.0 license,
 and sues users who use such fotos. the complaint here from a blogger
 who paid 900 euro, who used a foto, with backlink to commons, and
 attributing in mouseover:

 http://diefreiheitsliebe.de/politik/in-eigener-sache-fast-900-euro-verlust-die-freiheitsliebe-wurde-abgemahnt/

 what i would really love to see is that wikipedia is the role model,
 i.e. wikipedia refers the pictures as they should be referred by any
 website. the distinction because wikipedia is owned by wmf we refer
 differently to commons than anybody else needs to go away imo. be it
 only for the educational effect. personally i do not understand why a
 link to the works is not good enough as attribution. i thought
 cc-by-sa 4.0 fixes this problem anyway?

 to summarize, i propose to legalize the use case do it as wikipedia
 does when attributing images. to make the site look good anyway we
 should either fix the software, or the license.

 best,
 rupert

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Re: [Wikimedia-l] harald bischoff advertising to make images for the wikimedia foundation and then suing users

2015-07-26 Thread
As this may be a good opportunity to discuss the case as test of
Commons policies, this has been raised on the Wikimedia Commons
administrators noticeboard.[1] Please feel free to add evidence or
viewpoints there.

Link: 
https://commons.wikimedia.org/wiki/Commons:Administrators%27_noticeboard#Legal_action_resulting_from_photographs_by_Haraldbischoff

Thanks,
Fae
-- 
fae...@gmail.com https://commons.wikimedia.org/wiki/User:Fae

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Re: [Wikimedia-l] harald bischoff advertising to make images for the wikimedia foundation and then suing users

2015-07-21 Thread Lilburne

On 21/07/2015 08:00, rupert THURNER wrote:

On Mon, Jul 20, 2015 at 11:46 PM, Lilburne lilbu...@tygers-of-wrath.net wrote:

On 20/07/2015 19:38, Andy Mabbett wrote:

On 20 July 2015 at 18:09, Robert Rohde raro...@gmail.com wrote:


it is also hard for me to get behind the
notion of punishing someone for demanding that reusers due the things
that
Commons actually recommends that they do.

It's not a question of punishment, but of protecting Commons'
reputation (from being brought into disrepute, as it might be
termed)


If you start deleting the images from Commons you put all re-users
absolutely at risk who have linked to Commons.

Why?

Because you will now have removed the link to the attributions and license
that they were relying on. This is why anyone that links like that is a
fool. It is one thing to link to a page containing attribution/license on
your site. Quite another to link to some other site you have no control over
for the attribution/license.

the link is good enough imo, commons does not throw away the record
that the foto was there and everything can be reconstructed in case of
trouble.



You shouldn't need to reconstruct anything. The attribution should be 
there. If someone has linked to the attribution on Commons and Commons 
admins have deleted the page in some snit then the attribution is no 
longer there. Regardless as to whether linking to attribution is finally 
considered by a court as OK. The link is no longer to the attribution. 
Even CC v4 licenses don't say that it is OK to link to a page where the 
attribution may or may not be, or where the attribution may upon request 
be reconstructed, or hunted down. If people are relying on the 
attribution being at the end of the links then you can't effectively 404 
the links.



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Re: [Wikimedia-l] harald bischoff advertising to make images for the wikimedia foundation and then suing users

2015-07-21 Thread rupert THURNER
On Mon, Jul 20, 2015 at 11:46 PM, Lilburne lilbu...@tygers-of-wrath.net wrote:
 On 20/07/2015 19:38, Andy Mabbett wrote:

 On 20 July 2015 at 18:09, Robert Rohde raro...@gmail.com wrote:

 it is also hard for me to get behind the
 notion of punishing someone for demanding that reusers due the things
 that
 Commons actually recommends that they do.

 It's not a question of punishment, but of protecting Commons'
 reputation (from being brought into disrepute, as it might be
 termed)


 If you start deleting the images from Commons you put all re-users
 absolutely at risk who have linked to Commons.

 Why?

 Because you will now have removed the link to the attributions and license
 that they were relying on. This is why anyone that links like that is a
 fool. It is one thing to link to a page containing attribution/license on
 your site. Quite another to link to some other site you have no control over
 for the attribution/license.

the link is good enough imo, commons does not throw away the record
that the foto was there and everything can be reconstructed in case of
trouble. but - i'd love that this gets solved on a technical level.
every media file in commons either contains the author, or it is set
by wikipedia software into the metadata. resizing and storing retains
this information. after a while all toolchains will retain such
information and the problem of wikipedia as cause of cease and desist
letters (german: abmahnung) [0] will cease to exist. even for offline
wikipedia (kiwix, and similar) and direct links to media. there was a
non-wikipedia case a while ago [1], where the court says even in
direct links to the image you should be able to see the author and
license. it was dragged on to a higher instance but i could not find
what the final judgement was.

another challenge in this context are user defined licenses. those
were used by lawyers cease and desist letters bearing a 600-1500 eur
price tag. there seems to be even a business in fighting such letters,
naming wikipedia authors [2][3]. just as example, one of the mentioned
users images has Permission={{User:Ralf Roletschek/Autor2}} as foto
license. [4]. different author, same strategy, outcome You must
attribute the work in the manner specified by the author or licensor
for a cc-by-sa 3.0 foto [5]

[0] https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Abmahnung
[1] 
http://www.chip.de/news/LG-Koeln-Copyright-Urteil-schafft-neue-Abmahn-Falle_66923908.html
[2] 
http://www.abmahnung.de/abmahnung-rechtsanwalt-dr-iur-hans-g-muesse-im-auftrag-eines-rechteinhabers.html
[3] 
http://www.obladen-gaessler.de/wikipedia-abmahnung-durch-ra-dr-hans-g-muesse-fuer-alexander-savin/
[4] 
https://commons.wikimedia.org/wiki/File:Farmer_plowing_in_Fahrenwalde,_Mecklenburg-Vorpommern,_Germany.jpg
[5] 
https://commons.wikimedia.org/wiki/File:2013-06-08_Projekt_Hei%C3%9Fluftballon_-_Highflyer_DSCF7768.jpg

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Re: [Wikimedia-l] harald bischoff advertising to make images for the wikimedia foundation and then suing users

2015-07-20 Thread Jane Darnell
I would agree - it has annoyed me for years that on Dutch Wikipedia, if you
use a painting image from Commons in an article, you may attribute the
painter (though it's not required) but you may NOT attribute the painting's
owner (often a museum and this seems ridiculous to me). I agree we should
reopen the discussion about image attributions on all projects.

On Mon, Jul 20, 2015 at 10:07 AM, rupert THURNER rupert.thur...@gmail.com
wrote:

 hi,

 may i propose to fix the attribution problem for the one common use
 case do it like wikipedia does. somebody who refers to images from
 commons like wikipedia does it should be on legal safe grounds.

 there is a recent incident of non-wiki-love where user harald bischoff
 states comes into situations where pictures for the WMF are created,
 here:


 https://de.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=Benutzer:Haraldbischoffdiff=prevoldid=143679802
 komme ich regelmässig in Situationen in denen auch das eine oder
 andere Foto für die wikimedia-foundation

 harald bischoff then uploads these pictures with cc-by-sa-3.0 license,
 and sues users who use such fotos. the complaint here from a blogger
 who paid 900 euro, who used a foto, with backlink to commons, and
 attributing in mouseover:

 http://diefreiheitsliebe.de/politik/in-eigener-sache-fast-900-euro-verlust-die-freiheitsliebe-wurde-abgemahnt/

 what i would really love to see is that wikipedia is the role model,
 i.e. wikipedia refers the pictures as they should be referred by any
 website. the distinction because wikipedia is owned by wmf we refer
 differently to commons than anybody else needs to go away imo. be it
 only for the educational effect. personally i do not understand why a
 link to the works is not good enough as attribution. i thought
 cc-by-sa 4.0 fixes this problem anyway?

 to summarize, i propose to legalize the use case do it as wikipedia
 does when attributing images. to make the site look good anyway we
 should either fix the software, or the license.

 best,
 rupert

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Re: [Wikimedia-l] harald bischoff advertising to make images for the wikimedia foundation and then suing users

2015-07-20 Thread Robert Rohde
What do you mean by legalize?  The license is what the license is, while we
might influence future versions of the license, we don't really control how
current licenses are interpreted.  That is an issue for the courts.

There is a modest ambiguity in CC BY-SA 3.0 about the attribution clauses
(e.g. you must ... provide attribution and license information) that at
least allows for an argument that reusers should be personally providing
author and license information.  In CC BY-SA 4.0, clauses were added to
make explicit that linking to a page that includes that information is
sufficient (at least in cases where using a hyperlink is reasonable).

I am unaware of any legal cases that have actually delved into the issue of
what is sufficient attribution, which in practice means we don't really
know how the attribution requirements will be applied by the courts.  In
practice, most people are friendly about it and publishers work with
content creators (within reason) to satisfy the creator's expectations
about attribution.  However, this would not be the first case of a
publisher getting and paying a monetary demand on the basis of not meeting
a content creator's expectations about attribution.

Are you suggesting that we stop using older CC licenses (and GFDL, etc.)
that don't explicitly say that a hyperlink to the source can be sufficient
attribution?  If not, what are you actually asking for?
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Re: [Wikimedia-l] harald bischoff advertising to make images for the wikimedia foundation and then suing users

2015-07-20 Thread Newyorkbrad
I would have a serious problem with someone litigating, or threatening to
litigate, over an instance of technical non-compliance with the license
terms; much less so if the (alleged) infringer persisted in republishing
without requested attribution information after warnings.

Has anyone directly contacted Mr. Bischoff and asked him what he is doing
and why?

Regards,
Newyorkbrad


On Monday, July 20, 2015, Robert Rohde raro...@gmail.com wrote:
 On Mon, Jul 20, 2015 at 5:46 PM, Brad Jorsch (Anomie) 
bjor...@wikimedia.org
 wrote:
 snip

 Since when has that ever been a thing? With respect to licenses such as
CC,
 we follow the same rules as anyone else.


 Not really.  Commons actually recommends that an explicit credit line
 accompany CC BY images, which is something that Wikipedia doesn't do in
 articles.  See below.


 If the description here is accurate, it sounds to me like this harald
 bischoff should be blocked and possibly have his files deleted as
 incorrectly licensed (since he apparently doesn't accept the usual
 interpretation of CC BY), unless he publicly renounces the behavior of
 suing reusers. But I'll leave that to Commons and dewiki to work out.


 Commons' own guidance to reusers [1][2][3] recommends including an
explicit
 credit line alongside CC BY images, e.g.

 You must attribute the work to the author(s), and when re-using the work
 or distributing it, you must mention the license terms or a link to
 them...
 [R]eusers must attribute the work by providing a credit line

 And recommends credit lines of the form:  John Doe / CC-BY-SA-3.0, with
 an included link to the license.

 As I understand it, Harald sent a demand letter to a reuser who failed to
 mention his name and the license.  In other words, he demanded
compensation
 from a reuser who failed to do precisely the things that Commons actually
 says that CC BY image reusers are supposed to do.  While I agree that
 Harald's actions are not friendly, it is also hard for me to get behind
the
 notion of punishing someone for demanding that reusers due the things that
 Commons actually recommends that they do.  His behavior is either A) a
 mean-spirited attempt to extract money from unexpecting people by fighting
 against the spirit of the license, or B) a vigorous defense of his rights
 under the license.  And I'm not really sure which.  Suppose,
 hypothetically, that Harald actually sued someone (as opposed to just
 sending demand letters) and the courts actually agreed that the 3.0
license
 requires that reusers provide a credit line (not an impossible outcome).
 Would that change how we viewed his behavior?

 CC BY 4.0 explicitly says that a link to a page with attribution and
 license terms is sufficient, but prior to 4.0 it isn't clear whether such
a
 link actually compiles with the license.  There has been enough recurring
 doubt over the issue that CC decided to explicitly address the linking
 issue in the 4.0 version.  Wikipedia behaves as if merely linking to an
 attribution page is always okay, but Commons' advice to reusers seems to
be
 written with the perspective that it might not be.  (I don't know the
 history of the Commons pages, so I'm not really sure of the community's
 thinking here.)

 I do think there is something of a problem that Wikipedia models a
behavior
 (i.e. linking) that is different from what Commons recommends (i.e. credit
 lines).

 -Robert Rohde

 [1]

https://commons.wikimedia.org/wiki/Commons:Reusing_content_outside_Wikimedia
 [2]

https://commons.wikimedia.org/wiki/Commons:Reusing_content_outside_Wikimedia/licenses
 [3] https://commons.wikimedia.org/wiki/Commons:Credit_line
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Re: [Wikimedia-l] harald bischoff advertising to make images for the wikimedia foundation and then suing users

2015-07-20 Thread Andy Mabbett
On 20 July 2015 at 18:09, Robert Rohde raro...@gmail.com wrote:

 it is also hard for me to get behind the
 notion of punishing someone for demanding that reusers due the things that
 Commons actually recommends that they do.

It's not a question of punishment, but of protecting Commons'
reputation (from being brought into disrepute, as it might be
termed)

-- 
Andy Mabbett
@pigsonthewing
http://pigsonthewing.org.uk

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Re: [Wikimedia-l] harald bischoff advertising to make images for the wikimedia foundation and then suing users

2015-07-20 Thread Richard Symonds
I think the next step is for someone to notify him that he's being talked
about. :-)
On 20 Jul 2015 13:39, Andy Mabbett a...@pigsonthewing.org.uk wrote:

 On 20 July 2015 at 18:09, Robert Rohde raro...@gmail.com wrote:

  it is also hard for me to get behind the
  notion of punishing someone for demanding that reusers due the things
 that
  Commons actually recommends that they do.

 It's not a question of punishment, but of protecting Commons'
 reputation (from being brought into disrepute, as it might be
 termed)

 --
 Andy Mabbett
 @pigsonthewing
 http://pigsonthewing.org.uk

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Re: [Wikimedia-l] harald bischoff advertising to make images for the wikimedia foundation and then suing users

2015-07-20 Thread Robert Rohde
Poking around I found the following related discussions listed below (all
in German) dealing with the current issue and a similar 2013 complaint.  In
the second link Harald responds a couple times to the 2013 complaint.  The
Google translate versions of the linked discussions are somewhat hard to
follow so I'll leave it to someone with a native understanding to
summarize.  As far as I can tell no one has raised the current issue on his
talk page (either at DE or Commons).

It is also worth noting that Harald has about 800 photos on Commons, mostly
of athletes or minor celebrities.  Spot checking a couple dozen suggests
that the majority of his photos are unused, but at least a small fraction
are widely used across many Wikipedias.

Current German Wikipedia Discussion:

https://de.wikipedia.org/wiki/Wikipedia:Caf%C3%A9#In_eigener_Sache_.E2.80.94_Fast_900_Euro_Verlust:_Die_Freiheitsliebe_wurde_abgemahnt.21

2013 German Wikipedia Discussion about Harald's behavior:

https://de.wikipedia.org/wiki/Wikipedia:Administratoren/Notizen/Archiv/2013/08#WP:URF.23Fotos_werden_Hochgeladen_-_gesucht_und_dann_gezielt_abgemahnt_.3F

2013 Commons Discussion about same:

https://commons.wikimedia.org/wiki/Commons:Forum/Archiv/2013/August#de:WP:URF.23Fotos_werden_Hochgeladen_-_gesucht_und_dann_gezielt_abgemahnt_.3F

-Robert Rohde

On Mon, Jul 20, 2015 at 7:56 PM, Newyorkbrad newyorkb...@gmail.com wrote:

 I would have a serious problem with someone litigating, or threatening to
 litigate, over an instance of technical non-compliance with the license
 terms; much less so if the (alleged) infringer persisted in republishing
 without requested attribution information after warnings.

 Has anyone directly contacted Mr. Bischoff and asked him what he is doing
 and why?

 Regards,
 Newyorkbrad


 On Monday, July 20, 2015, Robert Rohde raro...@gmail.com wrote:
  On Mon, Jul 20, 2015 at 5:46 PM, Brad Jorsch (Anomie) 
 bjor...@wikimedia.org
  wrote:
  snip
 
  Since when has that ever been a thing? With respect to licenses such as
 CC,
  we follow the same rules as anyone else.
 
 
  Not really.  Commons actually recommends that an explicit credit line
  accompany CC BY images, which is something that Wikipedia doesn't do in
  articles.  See below.
 
 
  If the description here is accurate, it sounds to me like this harald
  bischoff should be blocked and possibly have his files deleted as
  incorrectly licensed (since he apparently doesn't accept the usual
  interpretation of CC BY), unless he publicly renounces the behavior of
  suing reusers. But I'll leave that to Commons and dewiki to work out.
 
 
  Commons' own guidance to reusers [1][2][3] recommends including an
 explicit
  credit line alongside CC BY images, e.g.
 
  You must attribute the work to the author(s), and when re-using the work
  or distributing it, you must mention the license terms or a link to
  them...
  [R]eusers must attribute the work by providing a credit line
 
  And recommends credit lines of the form:  John Doe / CC-BY-SA-3.0, with
  an included link to the license.
 
  As I understand it, Harald sent a demand letter to a reuser who failed to
  mention his name and the license.  In other words, he demanded
 compensation
  from a reuser who failed to do precisely the things that Commons actually
  says that CC BY image reusers are supposed to do.  While I agree that
  Harald's actions are not friendly, it is also hard for me to get behind
 the
  notion of punishing someone for demanding that reusers due the things
 that
  Commons actually recommends that they do.  His behavior is either A) a
  mean-spirited attempt to extract money from unexpecting people by
 fighting
  against the spirit of the license, or B) a vigorous defense of his rights
  under the license.  And I'm not really sure which.  Suppose,
  hypothetically, that Harald actually sued someone (as opposed to just
  sending demand letters) and the courts actually agreed that the 3.0
 license
  requires that reusers provide a credit line (not an impossible outcome).
  Would that change how we viewed his behavior?
 
  CC BY 4.0 explicitly says that a link to a page with attribution and
  license terms is sufficient, but prior to 4.0 it isn't clear whether such
 a
  link actually compiles with the license.  There has been enough recurring
  doubt over the issue that CC decided to explicitly address the linking
  issue in the 4.0 version.  Wikipedia behaves as if merely linking to an
  attribution page is always okay, but Commons' advice to reusers seems to
 be
  written with the perspective that it might not be.  (I don't know the
  history of the Commons pages, so I'm not really sure of the community's
  thinking here.)
 
  I do think there is something of a problem that Wikipedia models a
 behavior
  (i.e. linking) that is different from what Commons recommends (i.e.
 credit
  lines).
 
  -Robert Rohde
 
  [1]
 

 https://commons.wikimedia.org/wiki/Commons:Reusing_content_outside_Wikimedia
  

Re: [Wikimedia-l] harald bischoff advertising to make images for the wikimedia foundation and then suing users

2015-07-20 Thread Robert Rohde
On Mon, Jul 20, 2015 at 5:46 PM, Brad Jorsch (Anomie) bjor...@wikimedia.org
 wrote:
snip

 Since when has that ever been a thing? With respect to licenses such as CC,
 we follow the same rules as anyone else.


Not really.  Commons actually recommends that an explicit credit line
accompany CC BY images, which is something that Wikipedia doesn't do in
articles.  See below.


 If the description here is accurate, it sounds to me like this harald
 bischoff should be blocked and possibly have his files deleted as
 incorrectly licensed (since he apparently doesn't accept the usual
 interpretation of CC BY), unless he publicly renounces the behavior of
 suing reusers. But I'll leave that to Commons and dewiki to work out.


Commons' own guidance to reusers [1][2][3] recommends including an explicit
credit line alongside CC BY images, e.g.

You must attribute the work to the author(s), and when re-using the work
or distributing it, you must mention the license terms or a link to
them...
[R]eusers must attribute the work by providing a credit line

And recommends credit lines of the form:  John Doe / CC-BY-SA-3.0, with
an included link to the license.

As I understand it, Harald sent a demand letter to a reuser who failed to
mention his name and the license.  In other words, he demanded compensation
from a reuser who failed to do precisely the things that Commons actually
says that CC BY image reusers are supposed to do.  While I agree that
Harald's actions are not friendly, it is also hard for me to get behind the
notion of punishing someone for demanding that reusers due the things that
Commons actually recommends that they do.  His behavior is either A) a
mean-spirited attempt to extract money from unexpecting people by fighting
against the spirit of the license, or B) a vigorous defense of his rights
under the license.  And I'm not really sure which.  Suppose,
hypothetically, that Harald actually sued someone (as opposed to just
sending demand letters) and the courts actually agreed that the 3.0 license
requires that reusers provide a credit line (not an impossible outcome).
Would that change how we viewed his behavior?

CC BY 4.0 explicitly says that a link to a page with attribution and
license terms is sufficient, but prior to 4.0 it isn't clear whether such a
link actually compiles with the license.  There has been enough recurring
doubt over the issue that CC decided to explicitly address the linking
issue in the 4.0 version.  Wikipedia behaves as if merely linking to an
attribution page is always okay, but Commons' advice to reusers seems to be
written with the perspective that it might not be.  (I don't know the
history of the Commons pages, so I'm not really sure of the community's
thinking here.)

I do think there is something of a problem that Wikipedia models a behavior
(i.e. linking) that is different from what Commons recommends (i.e. credit
lines).

-Robert Rohde

[1]
https://commons.wikimedia.org/wiki/Commons:Reusing_content_outside_Wikimedia
[2]
https://commons.wikimedia.org/wiki/Commons:Reusing_content_outside_Wikimedia/licenses
[3] https://commons.wikimedia.org/wiki/Commons:Credit_line
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Re: [Wikimedia-l] harald bischoff advertising to make images for the wikimedia foundation and then suing users

2015-07-20 Thread Brad Jorsch (Anomie)
***note this reply is entirely in my personal capacity and in no way
represents anything official***

On Jul 20, 2015 3:09 AM, rupert THURNER rupert.thur...@gmail.com wrote:

 the distinction because wikipedia is owned by wmf we refer
 differently to commons than anybody else needs to go away imo.

Since when has that ever been a thing? With respect to licenses such as CC,
we follow the same rules as anyone else.

If the description here is accurate, it sounds to me like this harald
bischoff should be blocked and possibly have his files deleted as
incorrectly licensed (since he apparently doesn't accept the usual
interpretation of CC BY), unless he publicly renounces the behavior of
suing reusers. But I'll leave that to Commons and dewiki to work out.
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Re: [Wikimedia-l] harald bischoff advertising to make images for the wikimedia foundation and then suing users

2015-07-20 Thread Brad Jorsch (Anomie)
***note this reply is still entirely in my personal capacity and in no way
represents anything official***
On Mon, Jul 20, 2015 at 12:09 PM, Robert Rohde raro...@gmail.com wrote:

  Since when has that ever been a thing? With respect to licenses such as
 CC,
  we follow the same rules as anyone else.
 

 Not really.  Commons actually recommends that an explicit credit line
 accompany CC BY images, which is something that Wikipedia doesn't do in
 articles.  See below.


Sigh.

I think I'll refrain from further comment on Commons' statement.


On Mon, Jul 20, 2015 at 2:39 PM, Robert Rohde raro...@gmail.com wrote:

 but in another narrative
 you are telling content creators that the few rights they are nominally
 granted by the required license (e.g. attribution) are worthless because if
 they try to enforce those rights we'll kick them out.


No, we'd just be telling them that a non-standard reading of the CC
license's requirements on attribution (namely the reading that You must
attribute the work in the manner specified by the author in the *non-binding
description* of the license means the creator is allowed to specify exactly
how and where the attribution appears,[1] rather than in any reasonable
manner, reasonable to the medium or means You are utilizing, and at
least as prominent as the credits for the other contributing authors as
the license actually says) aren't welcome.


 [1]: To the extent of magenta 24pt Comic Sans, presumably.
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Re: [Wikimedia-l] harald bischoff advertising to make images for the wikimedia foundation and then suing users

2015-07-20 Thread Lilburne

On 20/07/2015 19:38, Andy Mabbett wrote:

On 20 July 2015 at 18:09, Robert Rohde raro...@gmail.com wrote:


it is also hard for me to get behind the
notion of punishing someone for demanding that reusers due the things that
Commons actually recommends that they do.

It's not a question of punishment, but of protecting Commons'
reputation (from being brought into disrepute, as it might be
termed)



If you start deleting the images from Commons you put all re-users 
absolutely at risk who have linked to Commons.


Why?

Because you will now have removed the link to the attributions and 
license that they were relying on. This is why anyone that links like 
that is a fool. It is one thing to link to a page containing 
attribution/license on your site. Quite another to link to some other 
site you have no control over for the attribution/license.




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Re: [Wikimedia-l] harald bischoff advertising to make images for the wikimedia foundation and then suing users

2015-07-20 Thread Robert Rohde
On Mon, Jul 20, 2015 at 8:38 PM, Andy Mabbett a...@pigsonthewing.org.uk
wrote:

 On 20 July 2015 at 18:09, Robert Rohde raro...@gmail.com wrote:

  it is also hard for me to get behind the
  notion of punishing someone for demanding that reusers due the things
 that
  Commons actually recommends that they do.

 It's not a question of punishment, but of protecting Commons'
 reputation (from being brought into disrepute, as it might be
 termed)


There are two ways of looking at it though.  In one narrative you block
Harald and delete his images to protect reusers, but in another narrative
you are telling content creators that the few rights they are nominally
granted by the required license (e.g. attribution) are worthless because if
they try to enforce those rights we'll kick them out.

Ultimately though, I wonder if this mailing list is rather a poor venue for
this discussion.  Isn't it more an issue for Commons?

-Robert Rohde
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