Michael Snow wrote:
> We still need to get a system in place that requires people to provide
> source information when uploading images. For the types of uses for
> which US copyright law allows "fair use", the Berne Convention requires
> that the source of the work be mentioned. We cannot justify fair use if
> we aren't able to determine where the stuff comes from.
While it would be nice to have a "system" that's all database-happy,
wouldn't it be nearly as effective, and immediately possible, to
simply update the text of the upload page to ask people to give as
much detail as they possibly can as to the source of the upload? They
can be warned that if they don't do so, there is a strong risk of
deletion.
It is immediately possible, but I question its effectiveness. For about
the past two months, the upload text has included, "If you are
uploading an image under the doctrine of fair use, please place
the text '{{msg:fairuse}}' in the image description and give the source
of the image." Adding a warning about the risk of deletion for not
citing the source would be nice too, but somebody else needs to do it
because I can't.
And we should, again with an appropriate lead-time to allow people to
try to fix existing problems without edit wars over deletion, just
start deleting stuff that doesn't have proper attribution. (I'm not
asking people to start deleting stuff today, because a good-faith
effort to do the right thing all around will take a bit of time.)
I would expect that even stuff without proper attribution should go
through a deletion procedure with community involvement, in case
somebody can provide the information needed. And any large-scale effort
to clean out non-compliant images should wait until people are more
aware of the need to provide attribution.