The resolution wording is:
---o0o---
We feel that it is important and ethical to obtain subject consent for the
use of such media, in line with our special mission as an educational and
free project. We feel that seeking consent from an image's subject is
especially important in light of the proliferation of uploaded photographs
from other sources, such as Flickr, where provenance is difficult to trace
and subject consent difficult to verify.
---o0o---
I don't see anything ambiguous about that.
I find it highly ambiguous, and while I tend to agree with you that
probably the majority of nude images on Commons should be deleted due to
lack of explicit and verifiable declarations of consent, I do not feel the
wording quoted above would be helpful in persuading others of that. (In
addition, the absence of a clearly documented process for obtaining and
expressing consent doesn't help. Again, something that anybody can do, very
little technical knowledge required.)
"Consent" is a verb that is only useful in its transitive form. It is
meaningless to say "the subject consents." Consents *to what*? "...for the
use of such media" is not specific. Also, "we feel" is not language that
lends itself to strong project-specific policies.
-Pete
[[User:Peteforsyth]]