On Tue, Nov 11, 2008 at 5:50 PM, Gregory Maxwell <gmaxwell(a)gmail.com> wrote:
On Tue, Nov 11, 2008 at 7:43 PM, Bruce Perens
<bruce(a)perens.com> wrote:
[snip]
It is possible that Inkscape is not informing
image authors that their
stock textures have a license. Those authors then dedicate the entire
image to the public domain on Wikimedia, and do not note the licensing
of the contained texture.
Ugh. Are you following up with Inkscape on this or should we look into it?
Obviously we expect uploaders to do the right thing with respect to
any works that they derive from. Since we do not allow raster portions
in our SVGs that kills one easy way for third-party rights to sneak in
and generally we'd hope users realize that they have obligations when
they copy from another SVG. Textures are an obvious way problems
might sneak in.
<snip>
I know it is generally bad form to have raster images embedded in
SVGs, but is there actually some rule that says so? Is there a
process for identifying them and removing them?
-Robert Rohde