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Messing with photo rights |
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thekohser |
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Member
Group: Regulars
Posts: 10,274
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I'm sincerely confused. Take a look at this lovely photo of the Atlantic City skyline. Note that Wikipedia says of its use: QUOTE This file is licensed under the Creative Commons Attribution 2.0 Generic license.
You are free:
to share – to copy, distribute and transmit the work to remix – to adapt the work
Under the following conditions:
attribution – You must attribute the work in the manner specified by the author or licensor (but not in any way that suggests that they endorse you or your use of the work). Note that Commons also lists the same usage conditions. In the fine print, it says that the photo was obtained from: http://www.flickr.com/photos/20801313@N00/1322602837/On that page, the photographer has indicated that the photo is licensed " Some rights reserved", which if you click the link, it says: QUOTE Creative Commons Attribution-NonCommercial 2.0 Generic (CC BY-NC 2.0)
You are free:
to Share — to copy, distribute and transmit the work to Remix — to adapt the work
Under the following conditions:
Attribution — You must attribute the work in the manner specified by the author or licensor (but not in any way that suggests that they endorse you or your use of the work).
Noncommercial — You may not use this work for commercial purposes. The user who uploaded Bob Jagendorf's aerial photo of Atlantic City goes by "Chin tin tin". What gave Chin tin tin the right to alter Jagendorf's license? How common is this misappropriation? Looking at Chin tin tin's talk page, it looks like he is a serial offender, but he's never been blocked. The image is used extensively across popular Wikipedia pages. The photographer has indicated he doesn't want it being used commercially, but Wikipedia and Wikimedia Commons say that it can be used commercially. Someone explain this to me.
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lilburne |
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Chameleon
Group: Contributors
Posts: 890
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It looks like the user changed his default license from CC-NC-BY to CC-BY on the 2nd of June 2009. Everything before then is CC-NC-BY everything after that is CC-BY. Flickr does not change licenses retrospectively if you just change the default upload license. He would have had to reload everything into their organizer tool and reapply the licenses to the 1000 images uploaded prior to June 2009. He might not have known that was the case. Even if he did it would have be a pain in the arse as the process isn't easy when you are dealing with a 1000 images. You'd need to do it in several batches. So for the above reasons I'd say that the license was always CC-NC-BY and was never retrospectively changed from CC-BY. OTOH given that he's now using a CC-BY license you'd probably think that he'll be OK with a CC-BY license on the rest too. However from his flickr profile: QUOTE My photos have been published in the NY Times, calendars, annual reports, websites, magazines, etc. Please let me know if you would like to use any of my photos.
which indicates that he probably doesn't understand the licenses.
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pietkuip |
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Junior Member
Group: Contributors
Posts: 81
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Member No.: 12,524
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QUOTE(thekohser @ Fri 23rd December 2011, 3:16am) The user who uploaded Bob Jagendorf's aerial photo of Atlantic City goes by "Chin tin tin".
What gave Chin tin tin the right to alter Jagendorf's license? How common is this misappropriation?
As the FlickreviewR bot shows, the licence was fine at the time. And irrevocable. http://commons.wikimedia.org/w/index.php?t...&oldid=10878600
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Kelly Martin |
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Bring back the guttersnipes!
Group: Regulars
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Member No.: 6,696
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QUOTE(lilburne @ Fri 23rd December 2011, 8:55am) The guy doesn't appear to understand the licenses. But then I don't expect some wikipedia thief to understand much either.
If he didn't understand the license, then he didn't actually offer the license, and anyone who has used it since is doing so not by license, but instead as an innocent infringer. This means you can't be sued for infringement, but have to stop upon actual notice from the copyright holder. In any case, such reuse without the artist's consent is immoral and unethical even if legal; it is abhorrent to disrespect the artist's wishes merely because s/he did not understand the consequences of a dropdown box on Flickr's user interface. Commons ought to delete the images, if nothing else because it's clear that the copyright holder did not intend to release those images under an unlimited reuse license. They won't, though, because Commons is run by a bunch of jerkish assholes who are out to collect as much porn (and incidentially other stuff) as they can.
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pietkuip |
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Junior Member
Group: Contributors
Posts: 81
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Member No.: 12,524
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QUOTE(Ottava @ Sat 24th December 2011, 5:11pm) If anyone has some free time, compare the flickreviewerr bot with the licenses on flickr. See if there are any that don't match up from the past couple days. If there is at least one, that would be enough to toss out all of the flickr reviews from the bot.
It would not prove anything. It would likely be someone who had read your request here.
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Vigilant |
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Senior Member
Group: Contributors
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Vintage Ottava. Good to see the boy back on top of his game. QUOTE(Ottava @ Sat 24th December 2011, 7:02pm) Really? Because the bot has major errors and always has, and it has a proven problem with determining what the right page to view is.
Major errors! Proven problem! Amazing that no evidence of these errors/problems are ever forthcoming from Ottava as he makes these dire assertions. QUOTE(Ottava @ Sat 24th December 2011, 7:02pm) I like how you worked out a logical loop
TranslatedFromOttavaToEnglish: I am soooo much smarter than you. I see what you're doing there. Reality: I, Ottava, am a strange conspiracy fetishist. QUOTE(Ottava @ Sat 24th December 2011, 7:02pm) that would ensure as much copyright infringing material as possible is put into Commons.
TranslatedFromOttavaToEnglish: You didn't agree with me RIGHT THE FUCK AWAY. YOU. ARE. EVIL. Reality: coo coo, coo coo QUOTE(Ottava @ Sat 24th December 2011, 7:02pm) Are you doing this to troll Commons?
TranslatedFromOttavaToEnglish: I must show everyone else that ... YOU. ARE. EVIL. Reality: coo coo, coo coo QUOTE(Ottava @ Sat 24th December 2011, 7:02pm) Commons's core policy says we are to remove images if there are any doubts to its copyright status.
TranslatedFromOttavaToEnglish: I am going to be reasonable. I wish I had a friend so I could do the good cop/bad cop thingy. So alone. Reality: I am making shit up all over this place. QUOTE(Ottava @ Sat 24th December 2011, 7:02pm) Why are you trying to undermine that?
TranslatedFromOttavaToEnglish: PHEAR ME!!!1oneEleven! Reality: I am banned from almost every project I have ever done any work on. I am a giant fucking loon with no prospects in real life. I need to feel good about my power some-fucking-where. Let it be the wiki...
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lilburne |
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Chameleon
Group: Contributors
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QUOTE(melloden @ Sun 25th December 2011, 6:24pm) Vigilant, darling, you're wasting too much time on Ottava. He isn't worth it.
Ottava, how do you propose Commons verify Flickr licenses, given that a Flickr user can change a photo's license at any given time, yet Creative Commons licenses are irrevocable? You don't trust robots. You don't trust other humans. Do you want to ask God or the pope to review Flickr images instead?
There is a big FAIL with the CC licenses. The problem being that a large number of people that use them on flickr don't actually understand what they are doing with them. The help forum on flickr and the various licensing groups get a number of whines each year about how some one has 'stolen' their CC-BY licensed photo and put it on some website. Well DUH! Then they proceed to switch them all back to All Rights Reserved. Sometimes they'll add a CC license to one specific upload and forget to turn it back to ARR afterwards. Now you'd think that it would be just a few dummies that misunderstand, but you even get it on wikipedia notice boards and the mailing lists that someone is using a WP page, or an image that they uploaded to WP, commercially. And just this last week I've seen a bunch of fuckwits on foundation-l whining about a 5 second shot of a WP page in a film. Which is in the context is probably a fair-use anyway even if WP pages were ARR. Then you have Scott-Mac whining about NPG stealing his copyright work which he cut and past from some other sources. So basically taking a CC license at face value is worth what you pay for them, they are added to stuff by people that don't have a fucking clue, and not having a fucking clue probably means that the license isn't valid in the first place. You really ought to take a CC license on flicfkr as no more than an advertisement that its usage is probably OK, but you won't actually know until you actually ask. This post has been edited by lilburne:
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TungstenCarbide |
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Allegedly shot down by stray Ukrainian missile
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QUOTE(Kelly Martin @ Sun 25th December 2011, 10:35pm) The commonly repeated assertion that "creative commons licenses are irrevocable" has no legal justification. The only blackletter law on the revocability of licenses requires that the licensor receive consideration from the licensee in order for the license to be irrevocable. Absent consideration, the license is revocable. No court has ever ruled that a CC license is irrevocable; given that, and given that there does not appear to be consideration exchanged as part of a CC license (that is, no contract is formed), I continue to be of the belief that a CC license is revocable and may be revoked at any time, by actual notice of such revocation from the licensor to the licensee.
This position is unpopular with Free Kulture Kreeps, because it undermines their belief that they can misappropriate other people's content whenever it amuses them. But I've yet to hear a cogent legal argument why I'm wrong.
Very interesting Kelly. I was just reading on the CC website where they state the licenses "are not revocable in the absence of a breach". Aside from the question of whether these licenses are revokable or not under normal usage, I wonder how often Wikipedia breeches these agreements. I've see editors at commons re-upload an image under their own name with no attribution and ignore requests to attribute. Then there's text that gets moved around making it difficult or impossible to see who the author was. This post has been edited by TungstenCarbide:
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EricBarbour |
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blah
Group: Regulars
Posts: 5,919
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QUOTE(Kelly Martin @ Sun 25th December 2011, 2:35pm) The commonly repeated assertion that "creative commons licenses are irrevocable" has no legal justification. The only blackletter law on the revocability of licenses requires that the licensor receive consideration from the licensee in order for the license to be irrevocable. Absent consideration, the license is revocable. No court has ever ruled that a CC license is irrevocable; given that, and given that there does not appear to be consideration exchanged as part of a CC license (that is, no contract is formed), I continue to be of the belief that a CC license is revocable and may be revoked at any time, by actual notice of such revocation from the licensor to the licensee.
This position is unpopular with Free Kulture Kreeps, because it undermines their belief that they can misappropriate other people's content whenever it amuses them. But I've yet to hear a cogent legal argument why I'm wrong.
It's funny how few times an actual copyright attorney has addressed Wikimedia's little issue. If you do searches for it, you find stuff like this--in which people advise each other to take photos from Commons, because they're "free". And here's an attorney recommending the use of Commons photos, for the same reason. The biggest dispute to date is still the National Portrait Gallery business. There's now a WP article about that, however embarrassing it was to WP. It's a stupid dispute, it crosses national boundaries (thus making it even more stupid), and it's never been in front of an actual judge or jury, so there's no decision. But at least the article shows some prior case law. Commons has yet to receive a serious legal challenge to its practices. Pro or semi-pro photographers posting on Flickr obviously don't have the money to pursue a copyright lawsuit against Wikimedia -- it will probably take a major corporation's involvement. In the US, in a US court. Until then, Commons gets away with (very quiet) murder. The WMF is taking a risk by allowing this to continue. Not that anyone cares, of course. This post has been edited by EricBarbour:
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