I propose that the current Project Sourceberg is integrated into a larger "Wikimedia Commons".
Said "Wikimedia Commons" should reside at commons.wikimedia.org and be a repository for - images - public domain texts - otherwise freely licensed documents - music, artistic works (but see below)
All material in the commons would have to be licensed under one of several licenses, not necessarily the FDL, but all allowing at the very least free distribution and commercial use. For texts, modification rights would also be a requirement. There would be NO fair use material on commons.wikimedia.org.
Material would be eligible for inclusion in the Commons if it is useful to at least ONE Wikimedia project. This includes plausible *future* usefulness.
The Commons Community would apply commons sense .. excuse me, common sense, to determine which files are eligible for inclusion, i.e. if a band is notable enough to have an article in Wikipedia, and their MP3s are freely licensed, they can be deposited; if a file is highly referenced from the outside and causes unbearable bandwith costs, it can be removed. The larger and more popular a file, the more pressing needs to be its rationale for inclusion.
I propose that we shall build an interface between the files residing in the Wikimedia Commons, and other Wikipedia projects, so that it will be possible to easily reference a file in the commons, like so:
[[Image:co:Airplane.jpg|200 px|A very nice airplane]] [[Media:co:listen.mp3]]
This would not create a copy of the file or auto-generated thumbnails on the local server (e.g. en:). However, [[Image:Airplane.jpg]] could be used to describe the file in the local language and context (we should probably rename the Image: namespace to File: in the long term, because it is also used for other description pages.)
All new uploads would automatically go to the commons unless the uploader explicitly chooses not to send them there (e.g. for material which is clearly only relevant to one project, only allowed under certain jurisdictions ..).
The commons wiki itself should of course be multilingual as Project Sourceberg and Meta are. There are some features which we should enter into our software development roadmap to facilitate the transition to using the commons: - user interface languages can be set in the preferences - automatic import of source information from the commons to the description page of the local wiki - better interlanguage handling in a single wiki installation - friendly user interfaces for multi file uploading, automatic addition of uploaded files to a category etc. - things that make life easier for people not familiar with Wikipedia - automatic gallery generation for multiple images of one category
What are the advantages of this system?
- Central place to resolve licensing issues - Less time wasted on locating relevant files - Less time wasted on re-uploading files - A place for things like image galleries that go beyond the needs of a single article (e.g. 10 different pictures of the same airplane) - We can actively solicit contributions specifically to the commons from people who are not interested in contributing on a regular basis - We can provide the largest such respoitory of freely licensed material, with a quality control mechanism that other such projects lack (the community) - We further establish our name beyond being merely the largest, greatest encyclopedia ever - We benefit from the positive connotations of the term "commons" and appeal more directly to altruism, which will be beneficial when we ask for donations - We create a very real consciousness for the copyleft idea which so far is missing especially for images, where many people simply upload whatever they find on the net. - We can use this platform to become more politically relevant in the ongoing discourses about copyright law.
What are the downsides?
- The user interface is likely to be a bit clunky at first. We can fix that. - This project can exceed Wikipedia in costs if it is successful. I believe prominent fundraisers will cover us, if not, we can fix this by limiting the scope of the commons. - People will upload all sorts of things which we don't want. We can fix that the same way we deal with Wikipedia articles we don't want. - Changes to the software will be very specific to our needs, other MediaWiki sites will probably be unable to interface directly with the commons. Maybe we can authorize other projects on an individual basis to interface with us.
I believe that we should not work on a temporary fix to the licensing (tagging) problem, but address this issue in one fell swoop instead. More generally, if we want to do this, I would suggest for Jimbo to authorize me to set up a roadmap on Meta for the implementation. That roadmap would also be a place for volunteers to list themselves for specific tasks that need to be completed. This will have to be a community effort among developers, sourcebergers, wikibookers, wikipedians etc.
I believe we can launch the Wikimedia Commons within about 3 months, maybe less, if we work together. Let me know your thoughts and possible improvements to this concept.
Please help to get the word out about this proposal by forwarding this message to the other project mailing lists, translating it, summarizing it etc. As this concerns a way to share relevant data among *all* projects, I believe every Wikimedia user should know about this and participate in the planning phase.
I suggest that the initial discussion (do we want to do this?) take place on wikipedia-l (we have no Wikimedia list yet, sadly), and that the implementation discussion, if any, take place on meta.wikipedia.org.
All best,
Erik