[Foundation-l] Copyrighted maps and Derived works
Aude
aude.wiki at gmail.com
Thu Apr 1 18:30:10 UTC 2010
There are differences in how data (incl. map data) is treated under
US law and how UK/European law treat data and data collections/databases
Wikipedia is operates under US copyright law, w/ servers and the
foundation US based (not sure how the Amsterdam servers fit under
laws). In the US, facts such as listings in the phone book and
geocoordinates are not copyrightable. I think wikipedians deriving
these facts from google maps or google earth is okay under us law
On the otherhand, openstreetmap is based in the uk with servers in
London, and operates under uk/european law. I know that databases and
data collections do get some protection under law there. Thus
openstreetmap regards databases of coordinates (eg google) as having
protection and disallows google maps as a source for osm
Although deriving geocoordinates from google maps for wikipedia (under
us law) is okay, I would prefer not doing so and use osm, NASA
worldwind and other public domain or open licensed sources. (gps okay
too, though that gets into other questions). But the deed is done in
regards to coordinates and I see enough consensus among wikipedians
about facts not being copyrightable, so I'm not so interested in
debating that
The best way to link osm to wikipedia is not to import wikipedia
coordinates. Rather there is an osm wikipedia tag to enter the name/
URL of an associated wikipedia article
Aude
Sent from my iPhone
On Apr 1, 2010, at 11:21 AM, David Gerard <dgerard at gmail.com> wrote:
> On 1 April 2010 14:58, Alison M. Wheeler
> <wikimedia at alisonwheeler.com> wrote:
>
>> 2. Taking an image from a satellite or aeroplane image requires no
>> copyrightable skill: Camera points down, takes images at fixed
>> focus at regular time intervals. Images are published.
>
>
> Minor detail - although this is a valid point philosophically, as I
> understand it the current state of things is that such imagery is in
> fact considered to have a valid copyright, even if the creative input
> is "let's send up a plane and set this automatic camera going" or
> "let's build a robot with a camera and start it in a given place" or
> "let's send a probe to Saturn and have it take pictures." NASA images
> are PD not because of no creativity, but because they're US Federal
> Government works.
>
>
> - d.
>
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