That is not a logo but a badge and fits right inside the statute Mike and
the FBI are discussing.
I've nominated this for deletion. There may be others. Also, this is a
object not an image. It presents the same problems as an image of a
statue.
Fred
I think the "high resolution helps forgers and
impersonators" argument is
spurious.
Let's assume the logo were to be used improperly. Most people don't know
what the "right" logo is. A decent image quality (straight lines, etc)
would
fool most people if it looked "professional" whether technically accurate
or
not. Social engineering does the rest (not everyone will argue with
someone
who claims forcefully they are FBI). Basic image cleanup is something
anyone
can do these days and any computer can tidy up a poor quality image to
look
"clean" (photoshop). If there was doubt asd to appearance most
impersonators
only need to google image: "fbi badge" to get close enough.
In simple terms I don't see any merit whatsoever to a claim that a good
quality copy helps impersonators. Any impersonator will easily be able to
do
the job well enough to fool most people, and any capable impersonator
will
not be affected by Wikimedia's decision.
FT2
On Sun, Aug 8, 2010 at 5:11 PM, David Gerard <dgerard(a)gmail.com> wrote:
On 8 August 2010 16:57, Charles Matthews
<charles.r.matthews(a)ntlworld.com> wrote:
I think I found the word, early in 2007.
Misunderstanding that Gerard
is
more g'day than have a nice is a poor basis
for any such judgement.
Yes, the thread has been rather non sequitur all the way down. Assume
some bad faith and why, it's a microcosm!
- d.
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