Dear all,
Regarding Matthew's question on Freedom of Panorama and copyright of
statues, Katie's answer is correct and pretty much complete.
One of the main reasons that we've pretty much limited WLM-US to NRHP
sites is that statues can have copyright problems. The NRHP lists are
maybe 5% statues, essentially all published before 1978, and I've
never seen a copyright problem with one. The Wall, Korean War
Memorial and a few similar mall memorials are not on the list.
To photograph pre-1978 statues in the US please do the following song and dance:
Check with the SIRIS (Smithsonian) site or NRHP data to get the date
it was unveiled to the public (date of publication) - all you need to
do is show the date is pre-1978.
When you photograph the statue, get close up and walk around it,
looking for a visible copyright notice. If you can't see a copyright
notice, then it's not visible :-) and you are free to upload it to
Commons.
Can we trust absolute newbies to take this song and dance seriously?
(Yes, I sing and dance all the time) I don't think the newbies would
take it as deadly serious as some folks at Commons do it. That's the
main reason Public Art is not on this year's WLM-US agenda. It's also
a good example of how copyright paranoia effects Commons.
To tell you the truth, I don't think that pre-WWII sculptors
understood copyright in the same way we do now. Almost no sculptures
from that period have copyright notices, and I believe when they do
they were referring to bronze or stone copies, rather than
photographic copies. So Remington's 1910-copyrighted statue is one of
the most photographed statues in Philadelphia, and has been since
1910!
Buildings, boats, railway locomotives, cornfields, big rocks,
breakwaters and other NRHP sites don't have this copyright problem.
All the best,
Pete Ekman
===
Message: 3
Date: Thu, 19 Jul 2012 16:22:32 -0400
From: aude <aude.wiki(a)gmail.com>
To: Wiki Loves Monuments Photograph Competition
<wikilovesmonuments(a)lists.wikimedia.org>
Subject: Re: [Wiki Loves Monuments] FoP and monuments
Message-ID:
<CAE4hJ8dRP_Q4XYpDrFr5KcfLTV=br0PP8z39z_dPXJ_FSPob3A(a)mail.gmail.com>
Content-Type: text/plain; charset="iso-8859-1"
On Thu, Jul 19, 2012 at 4:06 PM, Matthew Roth <mroth(a)wikimedia.org> wrote:
Hi all,
In Washington DC after Wikimania, I went on a monument photo walk and was
very happy with some of the photos I took of the Vietnam Veterans
Memorial<http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Vietnam_Veterans_Memorial>wallt;wall. Then I started
looking at the FoP rules in the U.S. and realized I
don't think I can upload most of those photos to Commons, given the wall is
likely considered a statue and is therefore under copyright. Several
questions:
1. Is this accurate? Should I consider the photos as inadmissible?
I believe the Vietnam Veterans Memorial wall is okay, however the Vietnam
Womens Memorial and the Korean War Memorial are both copyrighted and it's
been enforced.
http://www.techdirt.com/articles/20120515/14051218928/postal-service-could-…
2. Does anyone have experience in other countries with
monuments that are
on the list but are still under copyright? Will we need to be clear that
some of the sites on the Register in the U.S. are not eligible for the
contest?
1978 and 1989 are the magic dates relating to copyright of public artwork
http://commons.wikimedia.org/wiki/Commons:Public_art_and_copyrights_in_the_…
3. How does the primary
photo<http://commons.wikimedia.org/wiki/File:TouchWall.jpg>on the EnWP article
qualify to be hosted on Commons?
Per the freedom of panorama and other guidelines (see above)
Note that the rules vary greatly from country to country. Permanently
situated outdoor sculpture in Canada is okay for Commons, but not the U.S.
and other places.
Cheers,
Katie
Is there a percentage of a photo that can still
contain a copyrighted
monument and be acceptable for upload to Commons? Or is it a resolution
issue? It seems there are various photos of the wall that are on Commons
that similarly display the wall without copyright notices or templates, like
this
one<http://commons.wikimedia.org/wiki/File:Vietnam_Veterans_with_Washing…
.
Any insight would be appreciated.
thanks,
Matthew
--
Matthew Roth
Global Communications
Wikimedia Foundation
+1.415.839.6885 ext 6635
www.wikimediafoundation.org
*https://donate.wikimedia.org*