Dear All,
Thanks for beginning discussion on this important topic,Pandarpur and God
Viththal is very old and very central to Marathi and Maharashtra culture, I
still remember few years back I failed to upload an image of God Vitthala of
Pandharpur on commons, subsequently some one succeeded to upload an image under
proper license.
While it is true that we need to believe in people, I have very closely
observed quite a few people selecting some license for the sake of it or just
to retain the image. While it is true that now that Vithathal image is there on
wikipedia pages,still I am not sure how far legal it is ?
while god is one or many, for Indian Legal system idols in temples are treated
as person and those are public places but not necessarily in public domain per
say, many temples across India you will notice having notice boards which
strictly prohibit taking a photo graph of the idol and temple; I dont know why
this system exist in the temple but when it is there we are supposed to comply
the law.
Why we need to be concerned ?
So an image coming without permission from temple authority is anyway
illegal.What we need to understand is not that we are concerned about copy right
for the sake of it, we ( commons/wikipedia) are concerned of the issue because
we just do not want to do a collection of information and knowledge, but we
share, and we do not want just share through wikipedia site but we want
wikipedias to be a vehicle of knowledge sharing where other medias of
communication can come forward to take this info and knowledge to masses. When
we share info knowledge with other media people, they will do so only if they
are assured that material available at wikipedias is legal enough.
There is total lack of awareness , concern and sensitivity and above all Law is
a complex subject. Given that, the funny thing is you go to a person with a
request to make otherwise an unimportant thing copy right free he may not
co-operate ask you thousand frustrating questions, but the same fellow you may
find,floating copy-right of others happily every now and then
At Wikipedia for many Indians, it is there first time in life time that some one
is asking them about copy right, they are simply surprised in disbelief and
usually they are so passionate about their subject at their hand at least until
they receive several requests/warnings they happily tend to ignore such
communications .
And why not so ? just few years back,to write copyright related help pages (on
marathi wikipedia), I thought to procure few Copyright related books from the
market, In Pune I went from shop to shop what I could get just a bare act
copy.Only one shop was carrying book with detail commentary and the price he
told me for the same was just Rs 12000!.Then at least for few months I tried to
get an appointment with a law college principal and simply all that effort
turned out to be futile without getting an appointment ever.
Servers are in USA! So can I bypass the Indian laws ?
Again I see a huge number of people using fair use clause for uploading images
on Wikipedia, and that too under provisions of non-Indian laws ! Whether servers
are in USA and some thing is legal under their law suffice the requirements of
Indian Laws ? When a kite is floating from Indian soil to out of India border or
a kite is floating in Indian sky from out side India,is it not an Indian law,
at least to all Indian subjects, is supposed to get applied ?
Accepted that intellectual property acts in most countries are similar now a
days but those simply can not be the same because laws are subject to final
definition by supreme judiciary of each country independently.
How fair is the fair use under Indian Laws?
While I dont have a detail commentary of Indian Copy right law , what I read
until now is bare copyright law .My understanding is while Indian Copy Right
act has provisions of fair dealing but those concessions are largely for
educational and restricted community performances. While Wikipedia has
educational component and non profit but we are not a website that restricts
other making profit from the info available on it so in perfect sense we are not
supposed to get concessions on account of fair use/deal under present Indian
Copy right act; unless owner of the copyright himself permits such usage.
Similar to commons,unlike to english wikipedia, I have kept a proposal on
Marathi Wikipedia to bar usage of fair use provision since according to me we
(wikipedia and indic wikipedians) are not supposed to benefit any concession
under Indian Copyright fair use clause. We do lack enough legal expertise at
mr-wiki community,so inputs on this issue from other indic wikipedians are most
welcome ,imporant and will be valuable to us all.
Look forward to read more opinions on above issues and continued discussion of
copyright subject on this forum
Thanks
Mahitgar from Marathi Wikipedia
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Today's Topics:
1. Re: Fwd: Copyright problems of images from India (Sreejith K.)
2. Re: Fwd: Copyright problems of images from India
(wheredevelsdare(a)hotmail.com)
----------------------------------------------------------------------
Message: 1
Date: Tue, 10 May 2011 16:48:23 +0530
From: "Sreejith K." <sreejithk2000(a)gmail.com>
Subject: Re: [Wikimediaindia-l] Fwd: Copyright problems of images from
India
To: Wikimedia India Community list
<wikimediaindia-l(a)lists.wikimedia.org>
Message-ID: <BANLkTinaqSxY1=q4WnrnGcYDxTgv2F6J_Q(a)mail.gmail.com>
Content-Type: text/plain; charset="utf-8"
All paintings of Hindu deities are not copyright free. There are clauses for
it. As per Indian copyright act, only paintings that were published 60 years
before are in public domain. Now the question here is how to prove the age
of the painting. Lets take a different example, may be Lord Ram or Lord
Shiva. How can we prove the age of the painting? In one discussion, a
commons admin asked me to find a book that was published 60 years back in
which this image is included. I need not explain the difficulty in getting
such a proof.
Similar case with photographs of images before 1943. Colorization does not
add new copyright, unless they add changes to it which makes it
significantly different from the original. Now, how do you prove the images
of such photographs? These photographs were taken during their lifetime and
probably belongs to their family when it was taken. As per current rules in
Commons, the family will have to send OTRS saying that the image belongs to
them. Even then, someone could say that the photographer is not from their
family and so the OTRS cannot be accepted. See this example ->
http://commons.wikimedia.org/wiki/Commons:Requests_for_undeletion#File:Varg…
There are a lot of copyright violation photos uploaded to Commons. In
between those deletions, a lot of genuine photographs get deleted for lack
of proof. The concern here is on how to save them.
- Sreejith K.
On Tue, May 10, 2011 at 4:37 PM, Bala Jeyaraman <sodabottle(a)gmail.com>wrote;wrote:
1) >>Ayyappan, a popular god of Kerala, has his
image circulated
everywhere on the plant with no proof of copyrights. It makes sense to
believe that this image is not eligible for copyright because
Hindu deities are all common property,
i have to disagree with this. All images of Hindu deities are not public
property. Most of the popular images were done by painters some time in the
immediate past - Ravi varma's paintings form the base for many deity images.
Similarly there are many unknown temple artists, who have gone uncredite
because of our practice of gross insensitivity to others' copyright.
Claiming that deity images are not eligible for copyright is wrong. They do
have copyright and unless there is iron clad proof of publication, dont
decalre them to be in public domain. The fairuse clause is there for cases
like this.
2) While i understand what sreejith is saying, repeated copyright
violations in commons by Indian uploaders is mainly to blame for this
backlash. In Ta wiki and in commons, i have to repeat many times to people
that "everything that comes out of google image search is not free". In my
experience, about half the people react defensively to such advice and
reflexively claim the image is "own work" and they "took it". They do
not
like being pointed out they are wrong and thus damage the reputation of
Indian uploaders further. Many of the regular commons users thus become
immediately suspicious when a new indian user claims that an image is "own
work". Even in the outreach programs i participated, people listen to me
drone about how taking images of google image search is not ok and do the
same the immediately after. This issue is not restricted to Indian users,
but is a major problem for us. The only way to deal with this is a
relentless copyright awareness campaign for Indian users.
3) Images of people who died prior to 1951. Here too the case is not clear.
Many photos of such people are reconstructive work done post-1951.
Colourisation of black and white pictures is a major concern. I am still not
clear, if colourisation passes the originality threshold and becomes a
original work on its own. If so, then such a work cannot be claimed as PD.
Personally i add a ton of descriptive information and long arguments to
prove PD in india and in case of my own images, i always upload with full
resolution and metadata. It is a sad bad situation, but the root cause is
relative ignorance of Indians (including me) about copyright.
regards
Bala
On Tue, May 10, 2011 at 4:07 PM, Shiju Alex <shijualexonline(a)gmail.com>wrote;wrote:
> Dear All,
>
> I am forwarding the below mail on behalf of a Malayalam wikipedian who is
> very active in Wikimedia Commons.
>
> Of late it is becoming very difficult for many Wikimedians from India to
> contribute to Wikimedia Commons especially if they are uploading historical
> images which are in PD. We are facing lot of issues (and many a times
> unnecessary controversies also) with the historic images in PD, images of
> wall paintings and statues, and so on. Please see the below mail in which
> Sreejith citing various examples.
>
> It is almost impossible for the uploaders from India to show proof of the
> century old images of Hindu Gods and Goddesses. The current policies of
> Commons are not permitting many of the PD images from India citing all sorts
> of policies which might be relevant only in the western world. With these
> type of policies we are going to have serious issues when we try to go for
> GLAM type events.
>
> But I also do not know the solution for this issue. Requesting
> constructive discussion.
>
>
> Shiju Alex
>
>
>
> ---------- Forwarded message ----------
> From: Sreejith K. <sreejithk2000(a)gmail.com>
> Date: Thu, May 5, 2011 at 12:03 PM
> Subject: Copyright problems of images from India
> To: Shiju Alex <shijualexonline(a)gmail.com>
>
>
> Shiju,
>
> As you might be aware already, we are having trouble keeping historical
> images about India in Wikimedia commons. This pertains mostly to images
> about Hindu gods and people who died before 1947.
>
> Please see the below examples:
>
> - File:Narayana
>Guru.jpg<http://commons.wikimedia.org/wiki/File:Narayana_Guru.jpg> -
> This is the image of Sree Narayana
>Guru<http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Narayana_Guru>,
> a Hindu saint, social reformer and is even considered a god by certain
> castes in Kerala. This image has been tagged as an image with No source.
> Narayana Guru expired in 1928 and considering the conditions in which
India
was in
during that period and before, it is very difficult to get an image
source online. Most active Wikipedians does not have access or information
on how old the image is or where a source of it can be found. Any
photograph
published before 1941 in India is in public
domain as per Indian copyright
act. Common sense says that this image meets this criteria because the
person was long lead before 1941, but we still need proof of the first
publishing date. Deleting this image on grounds that no source could be
found will only reduce the informative values of all the articles which
this
image is included in.
- File:Aravana.JPG: This image has already been deleted, but you can
see the amount of discussion that went in before deleting it. See
Commons:Deletion
requests/File:Aravana.JPG<http://commons.wikimedia.org/wiki/Commons:Dele…PG>.
(An almost similar image can be found
here<http://www.flickr.com/photos/anoopp/5706721852/in/photostream/>.…
image as put for deletion because it had the image of Swami
Ayyappan<http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Swami_Ayyappan>in it. Ayyappan, a popular
god of Kerala, has his image circulated
everywhere on the plant with no proof of copyrights. It makes sense to
believe that this image is not eligible for copyright because
Hindu deities are all common property, but again, Commons need proof that
the image is in public domain. This is the same case with all Hindu
gods/goddesses. The images can only be kept in Commons if the uploader can
provide proof that the images are in public domain.
- File:Kottarathil
sankunni.jpg<http://commons.wikimedia.org/wiki/File:Kottarathil_sankunni…pg>:
This is a picture of Kottarathil
Sankunni<http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Kottarathil_Sankunni>ni>,
the author of the famous book
Aithiyamaala<http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Aithihyamala>la>.
Kottarathil Sankunni died in 1937 and so it makes sense to believe that
this
> image was created on or before 1937 and thus falls in Public Domain. But
> some people in Commons is refusing to believe that and is asking for
proof.
Now it
becomes the responsibility of the uploader to show proof that this
image was published 60 years before today. The editor who nominated the
image for deletion is on the safer side because it is not his
responsibility
to prove that the image is a copyright
violation. So long story short,
anyone can nominate any image for copyright violation and it becomes the
uploaders responsibility to prove that its not. The deletion nomination
need
> not be accompanied with a reason for disbelief.
> - File:Anoop
>Menon.jpg<http://commons.wikimedia.org/wiki/File:Anoop_Menon.jpg>:
> This is the picture of Anoop
>Menon<http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Anoop_Menon>,
> a popular actor from Kerala. A discussion is going on about the uploaders
> credibility whether he is the original photographer of this image. Please
> see File talk:Anoop
>Menon.jpg<http://commons.wikimedia.org/wiki/File_talk:Anoop_Menon.jpg>.
> The reason for doubting the uploader is simple. This image has
professional
quality and
so the uploader cannot be the copyright owner because this is
his first upload. Strange? Now, it becomes the responsibility of the
uploader to prove that he took this image and I do not know how and nor
does
the person who is arguing for it. He claims
that the uploader can upload
the
> full resolution image with EXIF but whats even funny is that most of
images
> from the person who is saying this does not
meet this criteria. Again,
back
to round 1
in my first example. Its the responsibility of the uploader to
prove his image and anyone can doubt him for any stupid reason and commons
hardly cares.
As you can see, it is getting quite difficult to maintain images from
India in commons. India is a country which has only started to use Internet
less than a decade ago and we still do not have many of our countries' books
or sources of information online. So any image from India which gets
nominated for deletion in Wikimedia Commons get deleted for absence of
proof. Commons is ruled by *precautionary principle*, where in they are
not willing to take any risks on copyright and will delete any image for
which anyone has doubts. This is in contrary to local wikipedia projects in
India where it is rules by the *good faith principle* where we will trust
the uploader and it becomes the responsibility of the nominator to prove
that the image has false copyright claim.
This issue is beginning to hurt the contents from India. If we can do
something, its time we act immediately. If we are just going to just spent
out time discussing about it, the pictures of all Hindu gods and people who
died before independence might get deleted by that time.
Regards,
Sreejith K.
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