Garion96 wrote:
I think, but I might be wrong, that something coming
from the foundation
would lead to better results.
Please define the demarcation between what should be foundation policy,
and what policy should be in the hands of any given project. Except for
absolutely essential policies, most of it should be in the hands of the
projects, and one needs to accept that any two projects can have
different policies, including ones relating to fair use.
To quote from anthony's mail. "Wikimedia is
"powerful enough now that we can
insist on [free images], and get it, from just about any celebrity". Joe
Schmoe Wikipedian is not, and if a dozen people contact someone claiming to
be acting on behalf of the foundation, even that power is quickly going to
dissipate."
The fact is that when you are determining whether an image is free there
is a huge grey area. The grey area includes a lot of images that would
be free if people ever bothered to put in a little effort to make them free.
I just now and then get discouraged when I see the fair
use images mess on
en.wikipedia. I do like it that we can use fair use though but it seem to
be used too easily. If some good responses come from this, it would diminish
a bit the excessive fair use there.
So what's wrong with having fair use images, as long as they really are
fair use images. Excessiveness has nothing to do with it; establishing
quotas for the number of fair use images would open up the question of
whose fair use to use. It's good that you accept some fair use images
but what makes the use excessive?
Ec