The media we have are primarily if not completely briefings by witnesses
and people compiling the report. If we have exceptions to that we can deal
with it but I don't think this is the most pressing problem for the report
in question. Our goal here isn't to fix the internet or copyright but
rather provide the content of the report and its supplementary evidence on
Wikimedia so that it is preserved historically and there is no risk of
content vanishing due to someone failing to renew hosting or something.
-- とある白い猫 (To Aru Shiroi Neko)
On 14 July 2016 at 14:54, Gordon Joly <gordon.joly(a)pobox.com> wrote:
On 13/07/16 09:01, とある白い猫 wrote:
*
These can be the rationale or part of the rationale we can use to
persuade BBC etc. to willingly release such rights for a select number
of files.
But they do not own the rights to everything. Two cases come to mind:
1) The Archer's Fan Club
2) Desert Island Discs.
Many programmes will use snippets of music that are licenced in various
ways (e.g. allowed media and time duration). A radio drama might only be
allowed "on air" for a 28 days, or a year, since the rights for the
music used are time limited.
Gordo
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