"It’s great to have these images available, digitally, but why are you claiming copyright over, and to be the original source of, artworks and images from books which are already in the public domain? Why have you added a strapline underneath each image? And why is the precess of downloading high resolution versions of
these public-domain works so tortuous, with a CAPTCHA, irrelevant terms
& condition, and zipped files – why not make them available
directly?" - (comment no.3) http://blog.wellcomelibrary.org/2014/01/thousands-of-years-of-visual-culture-made-free-through-wellcome-images/
On 21 January 2014 16:53, Magnus Manske <magnusmanske@googlemail.com> wrote:Not going to happen; note work-in-progress, and discussion, at:
> So, we have the following options:
>
> 1. Ignore them (pity)
https://commons.wikimedia.org/wiki/Commons:Batch_uploading/Wellcome_Images_CC-BY
2b politely explain to WT that their licence statement is in error,
> 2. Upload them as public domain and re-iterate the National Portrait Gallery
> issue, and teach them that these open content wiki people are not to be
> trusted
and why, and that even if people in the UK abide by it, it is
unenforceable internationally.
No, for the reasons stated by Christoph, and in the Commons discussion
> 3. Label them CC-BY so the Wellcome Trust can get a mandatory attribution,
> which we would do anyway
cited above. And we would not advise re-users that the attribution is
mandatory.
--
Andy Mabbett
@pigsonthewing
http://pigsonthewing.org.uk
_______________________________________________
GLAM mailing list
GLAM@lists.wikimedia.org
https://lists.wikimedia.org/mailman/listinfo/glam