On 8/25/07, James Duncan Davidson james@duncandavidson.com wrote:
- I'd really appreciate consideration of changing the policy of not
attributing third party photographs where they are displayed. There are many reasons for this, but primary is that it's an accepted practice to credit photographs with the photograph itself.
Nyet. Plenty of books put the credit at the end. How many books have the credit for the cover art on the cover?
As well, the Creative Commons attribution restriction does state that the attribution be given in a manner reasonable to the medium and the means.
The medium is wikis the means is mediawiki. Click through is the reasonable manner in this case.
By crediting in a manner that is accepted and practiced in the photographic industry,
We are not part of the photographic industry. More relevant examples would be Encarta and Britannica online. Or just general websites.
it helps in a small way to let photographers know if the CC-license their material, it'll be used in a way that respects their wishes.
We have no way to know what the photographer's wishes are.
Placing that data one click away is not obvious to users and doesn't feel "right" from the perspective of a copyright holder.
Allowing blatent violations of :
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Wikipedia:Ownership_of_articles
does not feel right to a wikipedian.
As well as the spaming issue is becomes problematical in cases like this where there are three seperate authors to consider:
http://commons.wikimedia.org/wiki/Image:Caisson_lockenglish.svg#Description
- EXIF metadata should be preserved, even on resized images. Thumbnails can
be recreated, so junking those isn't an issue. But stripping unrecoverable information, especially that which may contain author and license information, is a problem when the images are borrowed and used downstream. I wish I had a good way to strip just thumbnails, but I don't currently know of one. Flickr has the same practice as well, and it's annoying....
This would require someone to rewrite the code. In understand that mediawiki uses http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/ImageMagick to resize images.