On Sat, Apr 19, 2008 at 2:55 PM, White Cat wikipedia.kawaii.neko@gmail.com wrote:
White Cat wrote:
Local projects should try to be as commons compatible as possible.
Different
names for free licenses should be discouraged. I can provide bot
assistance
to make the necesary changes.
I do not feel it is not feasible to ask commons to continuously clean up after wikis. Thats a constant waste of time. We can solve the issue as
early
as the upload.
It is not too late to make such a change. However if fewer and fewer
wikis
agree to use a standarised template name the problem will become increasingly difficult.
While I don't disagree that we should try to facilitate working across multiple projects, two observations:
- Ultimately, Commons exists to serve the remaining projects, not the
other way round. 2. Ultimately, the purpose of content (including templates) is to make things intelligible to humans, not bots.
--Michael Snow
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You are absolutely right. But this can work both ways. Helping commons better serve is of benefit to every wiki.
I really think dealing with over two million media and over 5,000 daily uploads, commons people have their hands full as it is. People working in commons aren't machines and making their job more difficult than it already is is of no benefit to anybody.
All wikis (except de.wikipedia which adds a bild- infront of template names) as far as I can see use the same template name for creative commons licensing. We can use similar naming conventions (abbreviations) for other free licenses such as GFDL or Public Domain (PD). On English wikipedia as well as others when people refer to a policy they tend to use abbreviations. Same practice can be applied to license templates.
The template name no matter how well or long worded it may be will mean little to a human. The human should be reading the content of the template, not its name in wiki code. Template names are for the most part read by machines not humans. Humans read what is transcluded by the template.
- White Cat
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I don't think this is something the foundation or the board can lay down. And this list is cetainly not the way to reach the different wikis. Now language is going to be a barrier. Yes, CC tempaltes are easily standarized (as they are now) but that's "the good case". Y "PD" (public domain) doesn't necessarily is obvious to, say, a thai user with no english knowledge.
I know enlgih culture is extended, but it's against the wiki mutlilingual spirit to force all free images to use english markup