Anthere wrote:
Now, it is problematic to me, as some of these images are declared being from me in other places (and it is important that they are from me *over there*), while now, they also exist in another website, apparently owned by another person, and not clearly gfdl any more. So, my offering them under gfdl to Wikipedia (that is, normally preserving my authorship) is likely to hurt me indirectly in my real life as some one could claim being the author and having a copyright on it.
Offering your images anywhere, to anyone, potentially carries that risk. The only sure way to prevent copyright infringement is never to let anyone else get access to your stuff. For things that are released under GFDL, you can let the person copying know that they need to comply with the license. That's part of the reason we keep track of sites that use Wikipedia for content. If we work with them on it, some will figure out how to comply. For example, McFly is at least moving in the right direction--who knows, a little more effort, and Anthony could even be a model for GFDL compliance. For those that don't, in the worst cases we can resort to a takedown notice.
If I can't remove them, I suppose however that I can replace some of them with identical images with a gfdl license embedding in ? That will not make it for the ones now lost, but at least, future pictures and future uses will be saved ? Of course, the embedded licence can be removed, but it makes things harder. Can I do that ?
I don't know of anything to stop you from embedding a GFDL notice in any jpeg or png file you upload. Or even a copyright notice, if you own the copyright to the image. I suppose people might object to the embedding for aesthetic reasons. You could also caption images with a copyright notice--I believe I've seen that a few times.
If Wikipedia itself does not try to secure its participants rights, how far can we go to preserve the rights we should have in our participation under gfdl Michael ?
For stuff that you have a copyright in, you can do whatever the law allows to preserve your rights. Basically, you as an individual have the same options available to deal with infringement as Wikipedia does. Wikipedia doesn't have that much ability to protect the rights of individual contributors, it can only protect its own rights. The most Wikipedia could do on your behalf is maybe lead a class action suit on behalf of all the contributors whose copyrights are being infringed. However, I would point out that your rights as a contributor do not come from the GFDL. They come from whatever copyright you own. The GFDL gives other people permission, it doesn't give you as an author any rights.
--Michael Snow