On 2/8/07, Marco Chiesa <chiesa.marco(a)gmail.com> wrote:
IANAL, but I'm not sure this can be applied to
works of art, photographs
and all the non-text things we're talking about. Last months SIAE
(Italian Society of Authors and Publishers) enforced copyright on an
amateurial art website which was showing contemporary paintings. The
website was describing and commenting these works, so the use of the
pictures was "to illustrate what it was talking about". Still, this is
copyright infringement under the Italian Law. Instructional purposes
means that a teacher can distribute N copies of a copyrighted media to
his/her students, but if you print a book well you have to pay the
copyright owner his/her fair royalty.
My understanding from talking to someone I know who is a professor at
a university is Italy (i.e. not a legal authority), is that the
Italian law takes a much more aggressive stance on the commercial
impact of a work than does the law other places. I don't believe
that the foundation policy should be to conform to the most
restrictive laws in the world, ... we should still be able to discuss
democracy even if the Chinese government forbids such discussion.
Rather, we should adopt rules reflecting a common subset.
In any case, I wasn't claiming to have solved itwiki's copyright
issues... I was only pointing out that the very loud voice screaming
that there was no parallel to fair dealing in Italian law was in
error.
Fair use is NOT a license.
Where did I say it was?
It's a way to defend yourself when challenged
about copyright infringement.
Sure, although it is equally true that "I have a license" is a way to
defend yourself when challenged about copyright infringement. :)
If you have a NC media used in Wikipedia
under fair use, why should someone who wants to use it non-commercially
be tricked into thinking that it is (c)All rights reserved when the
media is actually a bit more free? Ok, not free enough for Wikimedia,
but hey someone else may have other interests out there...
Because "a bit more free" is nowhere near free enough, and by
advertising that it is a bit more free we dramatically reduce the
interest in getting it free enough, because there will be some people
who are happy with the "bit more free" and their voices will be
removed from the chorus asking and looking for ways to make it free
enough.
In any case, thats my personal view. It's not policy, nor have I ever
asked it to be policy. I provided it as contrast to show that there
are people who not only disagree with accepting such licenses, but
whom consider them so harmful that they'd rather we not do anything
which could possibly seen as promoting them.