[Foundation-l] Wimimedia Radio WAS:RE: Legal position of audio recordings of GFDLcontent?
Pharos
pharosofalexandria at gmail.com
Thu Apr 24 01:36:22 UTC 2008
Fantastic idea. Let's just remember to start modestly; otherwise it
might fizzle out like some of the video efforts.
Thanks,
Pharos
On Wed, Apr 23, 2008 at 7:56 AM, Brian McNeil
<brian.mcneil at wikinewsie.org> wrote:
> Let's run with the idea that provoked these questions to foundation-l, and
> to the FSF. The most apparent one to most people here is the Spoken Articles
> on Wikipedia. They're from GFDL material and looking at the license as it
> stands, none of the people drafting it dreamt an encyclopedia - let alone
> audio portions thereof - would ever exist and be covered by it. Perhaps it
> is fortuitous that this aspect has come up before the new license is in
> place? Perhaps there is a wider scope to consider in drafting it?
>
> That "wider scope" is what one of the contributors to this discussion has
> highlighted as a seriously headache-forming area under current constraints,
> namely Radio. Trust me, dealing with a license that was drafted when
> hard-cased floppy disks were cutting-edge technology is going to give Mike
> Godwin headaches, not just the average list contributor.
>
> So, yes, as a few people on a few of the non-WP projects are aware, the idea
> that provoked these questions was indeed radio. A 24/7 MediaWiki Radio
> service running Wikinews new pieces, spoken Wikipedia, music from Commons,
> Lectures workshops and tutorials from Wikiversity, Quote of the Day from
> Wikiquote, and "Book of the Month" from Wikisource. As the discussion on the
> Communications Committee list saw this labelled, "WikiRadio 4" (See WP
> article on BBC Radio 4").
>
> What are people's thoughts on this? Kicking the idea about on Wikinews'
> Water Cooler has made it look that filling a repeated six or eight-hour
> schedule is achievable within a realistic timeframe. It does not conflict
> with projects getting off the ground to do podcasts, but would mean they'd
> need advised to start working towards fitting to broadcast time constraints
> as a way of having an eye on the future. Could we aim for a radio station
> for Wikimania 2008, with Spanish lessons broadcast in the preceding
> weeks/months? Could we persuade Wikipedia people to add "doing a recording"
> to the composition of the daily main page?
>
>
> Brian McNeil
>
> -----Original Message-----
> From: foundation-l-bounces at lists.wikimedia.org
> [mailto:foundation-l-bounces at lists.wikimedia.org] On Behalf Of geni
> Sent: 22 April 2008 19:37
> To: Wikimedia Foundation Mailing List
> Subject: Re: [Foundation-l] Legal position of audio recordings of
> GFDLcontent?
>
> On 22/04/2008, David Gerard <dgerard at gmail.com> wrote:
> > One important question: how do you manage GFDL on spoken text? To the
> > satisfaction of, e.g., querulous Commons admins who deal with
> > licensing stupidities all the time? (Geni, I'm looking at you ;-) )
>
> You can't but assuming you are dealing with more normal people there
> are ways to do it.
>
> > Requiring a reading of the license on the end of all audios is
> > onerous. Our many spoken articles on English Wikipedia are
> > (presumably) not a violation as long as they're on Wikipedia, with the
> > license text a link away - but aren't really unencumbered for use
> > elsewhere.
>
> Not the problem you might think. Obviously it will limit the formats
> you can use. 45s and 78s are going to be basically unusable and 33s
> would be fairly borderline.
>
> For CDs it is less of a problem. You have a single track dedicated to
> the legal stuff and everything else just as normal. If you want to put
> multiple articles onto a single CD then it would probably a be a good
> idea to take the approach of merging them into a single document. If
> you make a CD that is say a series of spoken versions of our US
> president articles then you are going to run into problems with the
> size of the article history but by using synthesised speech and
> dumping the lot on a separate CD it should be doable.
>
> In the end it's just another version of the old overhead problem that
> means the GFDL is useless for postcards as well.
>
> Invariant sections can of course case massive problems. If an
> invariant section is an image you are basically stuffed.
>
> >Is the GFDL fundamentally discriminatory against the blind?
>
> No more than many EULAs
>
>
> >This in itself IMO is a strong case for porting to CC-by-sa.
>
> Still runs into issues when faced with large numbers of authors. "keep
> intact all copyright notices for the Work" has the same problem with
> invariant sections as the GFDL.
>
> --
> geni
>
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