On 12/02/07, Phil Boswell <phil.boswell(a)gmail.com> wrote:
Brad Patrick wrote:
On 2/12/07, Phil Boswell <phil.boswell(a)gmail.com> wrote:
This worked a treat on our article for the author
Jim Butcher. I posted a
request for an image on his fan forum and the favourite image turned out
to be this:
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Image:JimButcher_sepia.jpg Sorry, just had to delete
the copyright on the drawing. It's a CC-by-sa
2.5license; the whole point of this discussion. It was rather ironic to
slap a (c) notice on the drawing which is supposed to demonstrate the
"right" way to do it.
Sorry, couldn't see what you meant for a minute. You refer to the (c) which
used to be in the *caption* of the image in the actual article. I hadn't
realised that could be a problem...yet more evidence that those of us who
are trying to do things properly just keep blundering on.
So what is the general rule: no (c) notices in articles at all?
Generally speaking, Wikipedia doesn't give bylines or the like to
articles, and actively discourages signing your work - should images
really be given special treatment in this regard?
--
- Andrew Gray
andrew.gray(a)dunelm.org.uk