I have seen no articles on wikipedia that could possibly compare for quality of writing with professionally edited nonfiction from an expert writer. All arts are difficult, and non-fiction writing is one of them. Consider the clarity of the writing in, say, the New Yorker and the ability of their authors to convey complicated material in readable prose. Distilling such information is a creative act as much as fiction or photography is.
On 9/2/07, K P kpbotany@gmail.com wrote:
[Re: Article authorship was: Making damn sure image attribution is very clear] Earlier: ... Photographers upload their original photographs to Wikipedia ... Response: ... Of a reality largely not of the photographer's creation ...
Peter Blaise responds: Ooops! What's THAT supposed to mean? A photograph is not "of a reality" any more than anyone's writing, or dancing, or singing, or painting, or any other creative form speech is "of a reality". As Magrite painted, "This is not a pipe" - it's a painting! (see http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Ren%C3%A9_Magritte) Universally, the photographer gets 100% copyright at the moment they release their camera's shutter, at the capture of even the latent image. Not part copyright to the photographer and part copyright to the creator of the so-called external reality! Rather than explore if there even IS an external reality, let me direct us all to review http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Copyright and many other copyright dialogs across the world and through history, especially about photography, which has been (legally) considered (US Constitutionally protected) free speech for more than 100 years already! Why is this news for anyone anymore?
Because people think that shooting pictures only requires the ownership of a camera--once the technology was invented everyone in the known universe became an artist. This isn't true. It never has been. Artists who took pictures in the 1850s that could readily be reproduced today to better quality are still talked about for their work--the artists are talked about, because they left something of value to human culture, their art work.
And heck, people pay for my pictures, even when they could shoot the same thing, and even though photography is not my genre. But I'm an artist, and people buy art, and technology doesn't make the artist today, any more than it did 25,000 years ago.
But writing facts, distilling information in a non-creative manner from published and established sources is something that a lot of people can do and do well--this is what makes Wikipedia work.
KP
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