I've been playing with an idea that a a kind of batch script could be applied to an image, and then the result of the processing becomes the image to display, but the real image is not changed at all. Someting like magick-script in a tag-function.[1] I have not checked how secure it would be, but MediaWiki already use the ImageMagick package.
[1] https://imagemagick.org/script/magick-script.php
On Tue, May 28, 2019 at 10:40 AM Fæ faewik@gmail.com wrote:
For Wikimedia Commons the issue of how to handle digital restorations has been discussed several times, there are no single solutions. The general position is that original images, such as very old glass plate prints from archives, should be preserved and displayed in their original state, but there is no harm in making available restorations as separate files that fairly and accurately represent the photograph and remove damage or flaws. The reuser or reader should never be in doubt that they are looking at a restoration rather than the original, and we have to keep in mind that we do not always know whether the reader's monitor, display device or printer may also adapt the saturation and brightness of the image.
Though it is possible to do large batch changes for light levels, sharpening, colour correction and so on, these remain controversial if the original file is overwritten. This is especially true when an artwork has been photographed or scanned.
Among recent on-wiki controversy is colorization of photographs, especially old black and white photographs. These may be interesting, and at times useful for illustration, but again the reader should be in no doubt that they are not looking at "reality" and as good practice it should always be easy for the reader to navigate to the unenhanced original.
Fae
faewik@gmail.com https://commons.wikimedia.org/wiki/User:Fae
On Tue, 28 May 2019 at 02:23, John Erling Blad jeblad@gmail.com wrote:
A quite common problem at all Wikimedia sites; we have a photo but the quality is poor. An example is the old photo from the cabins at Mørkedalen where a group of fighters hid out during the invasion of Norway.[1]
I've been using some manual tools to restore images, but it is very slow and the result is often not very good. What if we could automate the process? The work "Deep Image Prior"[2] could be a solution, it is quite awesome, but it is a bit too difficult to configure for most users.
There are several such automated tools, or algorithms that can be turned into automated tools, but the question is; do we want an automated tool set, or do we want to keep on doing things manually?
[1] https://no.wikipedia.org/wiki/Skil%C3%B8perpatruljen_i_M%C3%B8rkedalen [2] https://dmitryulyanov.github.io/deep_image_prior
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