Stephen Bain wrote:
It is not too broad; Commons has always distinguished
itself in this
way from general purpose photo/media hosting services like Flickr or
YouTube.
Andre Engels wrote:
I disagree. Pictures should be judged on their value
for Commons, not
on something else. And that value is decided by what the picture _is_
(as Kat says, informational and/or educational) not by what it _is
not_. If the best (from an informational perspective) picture we have
of a subject is prurient or exhibitionist, then I want to keep it. If
on the other hand a picture has been done very tasty, but nobody can
find a reason to call it informational, then I won't shed a tear about
it being deleted.
I had thought Sam said it nicely when he noted that Commons won its
independence years ago. Not all 6 million and growing media items on
Commons are going to be used on encyclopedia, news, and book articles.
'Twas not long after Commons went live that people started
understanding the wisdom in the proposer/founder's design. Normal
Commons usage was vastly exceeding objective media "requirements," and
an crafting an exclusive policy for a free culture (Wikimedia) project
just didn't make sense.
There are whole entire art and curated art projects on Commons which
have little connection to other Wikimedia projects other than that
they advance free culture by being freely licensed.
-SC