User talk:Saffron Blaze: Difference between revisions
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::::::It is because of [https://commons.wikimedia.org/w/index.php?title=User:Saffron_Blaze/license&diff=next&oldid=167924113 this] edit. This license is very much like {{tl|Attribution}} with a ShareAlike clause, which is also a "non-standard" license. That license even lacks a name. Here it has at least a name, [https://commons.wikimedia.org/w/index.php?title=User:Saffron_Blaze/license&diff=167924113&oldid=114781204 Saffron Blaze Attribution ShareAlike]. :) [[User:Jkadavoor|<span style="color:red;">J</span>]][[User talk:Jkadavoor|e]][[:Category:User:Jkadavoor|<span style="color:red;">e</span>]] 02:39, 6 September 2015 (UTC) |
::::::It is because of [https://commons.wikimedia.org/w/index.php?title=User:Saffron_Blaze/license&diff=next&oldid=167924113 this] edit. This license is very much like {{tl|Attribution}} with a ShareAlike clause, which is also a "non-standard" license. That license even lacks a name. Here it has at least a name, [https://commons.wikimedia.org/w/index.php?title=User:Saffron_Blaze/license&diff=167924113&oldid=114781204 Saffron Blaze Attribution ShareAlike]. :) [[User:Jkadavoor|<span style="color:red;">J</span>]][[User talk:Jkadavoor|e]][[:Category:User:Jkadavoor|<span style="color:red;">e</span>]] 02:39, 6 September 2015 (UTC) |
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:::::Attribution is a must even if "Share-alike/Copyleft" clause is removed. Copyfree licenses allow people to use different licenses in adaptations, including ARR (all rights reserved). In fact, "Share-alike/Copyleft" is not a feature for photographers; it is intended for free culture promoters (like Wikimedia) to encourage free sharing of adapted work too. [[User:Jkadavoor|<span style="color:red;">J</span>]][[User talk:Jkadavoor|e]][[:Category:User:Jkadavoor|<span style="color:red;">e</span>]] 02:27, 6 September 2015 (UTC) |
:::::Attribution is a must even if "Share-alike/Copyleft" clause is removed. Copyfree licenses allow people to use different licenses in adaptations, including ARR (all rights reserved). In fact, "Share-alike/Copyleft" is not a feature for photographers; it is intended for free culture promoters (like Wikimedia) to encourage free sharing of adapted work too. [[User:Jkadavoor|<span style="color:red;">J</span>]][[User talk:Jkadavoor|e]][[:Category:User:Jkadavoor|<span style="color:red;">e</span>]] 02:27, 6 September 2015 (UTC) |
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* The notion my bespoke license is somehow less because it isn't CC issued is bogus. CC with all its legal resources didn't even understand the implications of "work" and put millions in harms's way with respect to retaining some economic control over original files. I am not changing the T&C of my license. I think it will work for the vast majority of people that would want to re-use these images. They may not make the lawyers at some corporate office happy but give the example here perhaps they should be happy they have a job. [[User:Saffron Blaze|Saffron Blaze]] ([[User talk:Saffron Blaze#top|<span class="signature-talk">{{int:Talkpagelinktext}}</span>]]) 23:45, 7 September 2015 (UTC) |
Revision as of 23:46, 7 September 2015
Permission for Use of Photo in Human Rights Museum
- 31 August at 13:43
Dear Saffron, Hope this email finds you well. I am a producer who is collaborating with The Canadian Museum for Human Rights, in Winnipeg, Canada. museumforhumanrights.ca/ The museum is set to open this September. We would like to propose your photo in our video production. The video is an introduction to the concept of human rights, including the Rights to Education, Freedom of Speech, Indigenous Rights and Rights to Play. You had taken a photo, titled “Cotswolds Quilt“ in your Flickr account. Link: www.flickr.com/photos/saffron_blaze/8412296490/. Would you be agreeable to have the photo included in the production? If so, we would need a high resolution file of your image (with watermark) so we can include it in our proposal. Should the photograph be confirmed, we will require the full resolution file without watermark. We would be glad to credit you accordingly in the production. Look forward to hearing from you.
Thanks. Best regards, karen phan producer M'GO Films Pte Ltd 69 Kim Yam Road, #02-01, Singapore 239368 T. 6737 8907 x110 www.margofilms.com www.facebook.com/MGOfilms
- 31 August at 14:53
From: Saffron Blaze Hello Karen, thank you for your inquiry. Are you and your organisation also contributing to this project for credit consideration? I ask because as a Canadian I know the museum is a government funded agency with a substantial budget. I also know this in considerable detail because I am in fact in charge of a heritage portfolio for another government department. Given this I would be surprised you'd be asked to produce such a product for credit or publicity. Please advise.
In the absence of a response I will direct my inquiry to the museum directly. Cheers.
- 1 September at 12:21
From: Karen Phan Hi Saffron, thank you for your response. We have replied to your email on the flickr site. Warm regards, Karen
- 1 September
Hi Saffron, We are in touch with Getty for some images but would prefer to propose the originally mentioned image to the museum. The panoramic width of the photograph suits the narrative very well. Do let us know your fee for the image. As it is a very large screen, we would like to propose the highest resolution possible. Thanks and regards, Karen
- 1 September
From Saffron: This is the largest image size available: farm6.staticflickr.com/5443/8412296490_6e52ed09c4_o.jpg. If suitable we can discuss an RF license non-exclusive at xxx CAD or double that for RM exclusive. As you know all too well Getty would charge 3-4 times that amount, if not more. Please advise.
- 18 Sep 14, 4.14PM WEST
From: Karen Phan Dear Saffron, Hope all is well. The image we discussed that was proposed was not in the final selection. However, another image of yours from Wikimedia Commons, which had been suggested by a colleague, has been. commons.wikimedia.org/wiki/File:Sunset_iqaluit.jpg. The Commons nature of the images does not require a release form, but I thought to let you know of its selection as we had been in touch. Your image has been credited
Icebreaker and Inukshuk, photograph by Saffron Blaze, Wikimedia Commons Icebreaker and Inukshuk, photographie par Saffron Blaze, Wikimedia Commons
Thanks, and keep well, Karen
- 18 Sep 14
Thanks. Please note outside of Wikimedia Foundation projects, attribution is to be made to: W. Lloyd MacKenzie, via Flickr @ www.flickr.com/photos/saffron_blaze/ Take care.
I'll let you drawn your own conclusion. Saffron Blaze (talk) 03:15, 19 September 2014 (UTC)
The Commons Barnstar | ||
Congratulations for contributing your 100th Quality Image to Commons. I always enjoy your photos, both here and on Flickr ;-) Great work! --Frank Schulenburg (talk) 03:15, 5 March 2014 (UTC) |
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Homemade licence
I notice you are still using your User:Saffron Blaze/license consent homemade licence. I've a feeling we discussed this before and think we need per-user share-alike "free" licences like a hole in the head. I worry that with just a summary here (no full text, with definition of terms and legalese) your licence is both weaker legally and less useful for reuse. While one may feel confident (and able to get legal advice about) reusing "CC BY-SA" material, reusing material covered by some random licence (which is easily modified) is another ball game. Still, Commons, for some bizarre reason, seems happy to accept any licence that gives even an appearance of being free. I continue to be frustrated that everyone (include the UK National Portrait Gallery) think CC is a per-file licence that can be used for low-resolution works. And really, everyone would much prefer if CC was.
I note in the conversation you retain at the top of the page, that people are still not attributing you correctly. I suggest you try using {{Credit line}} in the Other fields section. See File:Lloyd's Building - Atrium 11th floor looking at the Walkie-Talkie.jpg for an example. This seems to be take up by the "use this file" link at the top of the page. Currently, that link gives Saffron Blaze on Commons rather than your preferred text. I guess you could use the licence parameter to link to your licence template page, though the fact that it isn't a well-known licence with a name, does make it hard for people to refer to it. -- Colin (talk) 11:15, 28 September 2014 (UTC)
- I think it is a moot point, as I doubt I will contribute images any longer. I find not only the people but the policies are hostile to content creators. Saffron Blaze (talk) 15:16, 28 September 2014 (UTC)
- That's a real shame. But I agree some of the most active, noisy and pushy people on this site are here simply to collect and organise other people's work and are either indifferent or hostile towards creators. I continue to enjoy your work on Flickr. -- Colin (talk) 16:08, 28 September 2014 (UTC)
- I could probably get past that, but when all I ever see is my images being constantly re-used by commercial enterprises it is disheartening. The above incident is not atypical just very open in admitting they want stuff for free even when they could be paying for it. Business are saying, "hey why would I pay you for an image when I can use the one you have available for free?". Unfortunately while I have many incidents like this I have none that speak to free cultural ideals. Long to short... there is no economic model for photographer’s that includes CC licensing. CC licensing is a wonderful concept but more often misused and abused than meeting its aims.
- That's a real shame. But I agree some of the most active, noisy and pushy people on this site are here simply to collect and organise other people's work and are either indifferent or hostile towards creators. I continue to enjoy your work on Flickr. -- Colin (talk) 16:08, 28 September 2014 (UTC)
- Similarly, I found someone this week uploading my images from here to Flickr, albeit with suitable attribution, but with different license (non-share-alike). Flickr removed the images based on ToS violations and not because of the license issue. It is just too much effort to police. I am returning to the conclusion the only sensible way to contribute to Commons is by donating images to the Public Domain and just forgetting about them. Saffron Blaze (talk) 14:47, 17 October 2014 (UTC)
- You should probably chat to User:Diliff. I think he's found some people do want to pay, and Public Domain would remove any chance of seeing that income. But I agree completely with forgetting about those who "steal" pictures. Well, except perhaps huge corporations with a brand to protect. They're probably worth fleecing. But seriously, the world is full of horrid people so why go out of one's way to find more? I think one has to either decide to be completely professional and view photography as a self-employed job, which involves a fair amount of chasing people to pay up and making sure nobody takes advantage, or view it as a hobby. I read the other day that with the advent of digital photography, we have gone from there being millions of pictures in the world, to billions of pictures in the world, and with mobile phone photography we are now at the point where over a trillion pictures are taken every year. And nearly all of them are locked up unusable by copyright + 70 years after death. I don't think CC is the whole answer by any means, but neither is "all rights reserved" all over amateur photos on Facebook and Flickr. That actually just encourages people (including BBC, et al) to steal the pictures. (BTW: I wonder how many newspapers paid for the monkey photograph they criticised WP for? -- I bet most claimed "fair use") -- Colin (talk) 16:55, 17 October 2014 (UTC)
- Some people are indeed willing to pay to use my images, but a frustratingly small percentage of commercial users, that's for sure. And that's just surveying the people that are actually polite enough to contact me in advance. I'm sure that's just the tip of the iceberg in terms of commercial re-use and as Saffron says, it's just too difficult to police or keep track of. It won't necessarily stop me contributing, but it is frustrating. I've never understood why an non-commercial/educational-use-only licence was incompatible with Wikipedia's ideals. I understand that there are situations in which educational use could overlap with commercial use since education is rarely completely free of commercial interest, but there must be some way of separating genuine educational re-use from predatory commercial users who cheat photographers out of any benefit 'because they can'. After all, ethics plays no real part in a corporation's activity since the number one priority of any company is profit for its shareholders. There is only the illusion of ethics when a company chooses to take an 'ethical stand' on something because it's usually the result of market research that tells them that an ethical stance might benefit sales. *not cynical*. :-) But yeah, I completely appreciate that it's a problem when images are locked up in copyright for 70+ years and the photographer is no longer contactable to grant permission. I'd probably be happy for a copyright of 5-10 years really on most of my images. Only one in a thousand of my images would really have strong commercial value after 10 years anyway. The rest would likely only have value as an historical record. One thing I don't understand though is why you think that all rights reserved encourages' companies such as the BBC to steal them. At worst, I'd say that it makes no difference at all. Diliff (talk) 18:05, 17 October 2014 (UTC)
- I sell images all the time... through Getty. Not once have I ever sold an image through other venues. Moreover, I have about 30 or 40 notices from Commons users letting me know they were using an image...all of them were well funded businesses and organisations including Encyclopedia Britannica. Similarly several international text book publishers have offered notice of use; then they turn around and charge exorbitant sums to the students to purchase the books they assemble on other people's works for free. Free Culture is a bust in my opinion, at least with respect to images we place on Commons. Commons has become a free stock image library for businesses, and this hurts content creators such as professional photographers and graphic artists. Saffron Blaze (talk) 17:52, 18 October 2014 (UTC)
- edit to add... I do remember one home grown business that asked to use an image. He was making wooden puzzles and needed terms beyond CC-BY-SA. I agreed to the terms and a few days later he sent me images of the puzzle and offered to sell me a copy for $200 USD. Saffron Blaze (talk) 18:00, 18 October 2014 (UTC)
- Offereed to sell you a copy of an image of the puzzle which was a derivative of your own work??? That's outrageous... Diliff (talk) 18:07, 18 October 2014 (UTC)
- Yes, sir... that's what he did. I chuckled quite loudly when I saw his email. I didn't respond. 18:14, 18 October 2014 (UTC)
- Offereed to sell you a copy of an image of the puzzle which was a derivative of your own work??? That's outrageous... Diliff (talk) 18:07, 18 October 2014 (UTC)
- I didn't want to reignite the whole Free Culture hurting pro photographers debate -- merely suggest that going Public Domain might remove all opportunity for money from Commons images. My point about "all rights reserved" encouraging stealing is that if trillions of images are copyright protected but a few million are Free and a few more million are available via agencies, that's essentially a rounding error. But if there was a way for billions of images to be legally used and appropriate credit and payment made, it might work. -- Colin (talk) 20:20, 18 October 2014 (UTC)
- I wasn't aware it was a debate. I was certain it is a given. I thought the debate was whether Free Culturists should care. That aside, collecting societies are trying to free up millions of orphaned works. Flickr, Facebook and Instagram are helping there by creating even more orphan works when they strip metadata including the CMI. However, of those billions and billions of images being copyrighted every few days the vast majority are selfies taken by young girls... copyright is the least of a re-users problem. Saffron Blaze (talk) 22:52, 18 October 2014 (UTC)
- While there are loads of selfies and other trash, there are also photos of public events and demonstrations, wars and catastrophes. These will form part of our global history, yet are neither available under a free licence, nor controlled and vetted by a professional agency. And once the metadata gets stripped off, the only way to use them is illegally. Which not only encourages illegal use, but encourages government to create silly laws that actually permit such theft. I do wonder if there is a commercial opportunity someone is missing out on here, but I can't think of a way to control images that would reliably retain a record of authorship -- DRM of audio/visual is so easily overridden. -- Colin (talk) 10:04, 19 October 2014 (UTC)
- There are initiatives out there. Flickr is about to launch a crowd sourcing initiative for content called marketplace. It will be different than what they did with Getty. They are also using image matching technology to index the billions of images stored on their system to at least make them searchable. There is also other crowd sourcing initiatives like CrowdMedia who is looking to leverage all those photos of public events and demonstrations, wars and catastrophes. When people realize they can make money even from their snaps and selfies there will be an interesting shift in the perception of copyright amongst they lay audiences. 15:07, 19 October 2014 (UTC)
- Good. But copyright law is such a blunt tool and our life+70 years nonsense is just designed to keep Disney and Cliff Richard in royalties -- there's no user-choice over the matter. Most people would be quite happy I think to release images once they die (most probably aren't even aware the copyright stays with the estate, and the trustees are legally bound to maximise returns) and many would be very happy to see some return for a short period. We lack an "all rights reserved for 5 years" option. I've seen photos of stained-glass windows deleted because they are probably not old enough to be PD. And copyright didn't help the monkey photographer. I don't really know, though, how one can reliably reward money to the crowd, who are pretty devious in their ability to steal, even from each other. -- Colin (talk) 15:26, 19 October 2014 (UTC)
- One option might be a two tiered system, as you mention, where if you register your works you get 35 years but unregistered works is 5 years, with the option to renew on either. I think fair use doctrine could be tweaked to cover much of the rest. Saffron Blaze (talk) 16:17, 19 October 2014 (UTC)
- I did think of that (a system where you are automatically given 5 years copyright, but given the opportunity to renew if it's a particularly valuable image), but a system where you have to apply to be granted copyright extension sounds very unwieldly. Copyright has always been implied unless specifically relinquished or renounced so it would be a major change in how it works. I suppose we're getting to the point where an automated system could be put in place - some sort of central governing body that could receive submissions and somehow create a digital signature of the image which would then be assigned to the uploader so that, like a patent, if there was ever a dispute, one could always refer back to that submission as proof that it is theirs. But having said that, given how many images people take on a daily basis, I cannot imagine anyone but the most copyright-aware professionals actually going to the trouble of doing this for all their images, so I doubt it would ever work effectively in the real world. Diliff (talk) 09:38, 21 October 2014 (UTC)
- That's pretty much how they do it now in the US. Copyright is there automatically once published, but you have to register the works if you ever want to sue for infringement. I don't think it is too far of a leap to automatically have copyright, but a much shorter time unless registered. Saffron Blaze (talk) 23:26, 23 October 2014 (UTC)
- I did think of that (a system where you are automatically given 5 years copyright, but given the opportunity to renew if it's a particularly valuable image), but a system where you have to apply to be granted copyright extension sounds very unwieldly. Copyright has always been implied unless specifically relinquished or renounced so it would be a major change in how it works. I suppose we're getting to the point where an automated system could be put in place - some sort of central governing body that could receive submissions and somehow create a digital signature of the image which would then be assigned to the uploader so that, like a patent, if there was ever a dispute, one could always refer back to that submission as proof that it is theirs. But having said that, given how many images people take on a daily basis, I cannot imagine anyone but the most copyright-aware professionals actually going to the trouble of doing this for all their images, so I doubt it would ever work effectively in the real world. Diliff (talk) 09:38, 21 October 2014 (UTC)
- One option might be a two tiered system, as you mention, where if you register your works you get 35 years but unregistered works is 5 years, with the option to renew on either. I think fair use doctrine could be tweaked to cover much of the rest. Saffron Blaze (talk) 16:17, 19 October 2014 (UTC)
- Good. But copyright law is such a blunt tool and our life+70 years nonsense is just designed to keep Disney and Cliff Richard in royalties -- there's no user-choice over the matter. Most people would be quite happy I think to release images once they die (most probably aren't even aware the copyright stays with the estate, and the trustees are legally bound to maximise returns) and many would be very happy to see some return for a short period. We lack an "all rights reserved for 5 years" option. I've seen photos of stained-glass windows deleted because they are probably not old enough to be PD. And copyright didn't help the monkey photographer. I don't really know, though, how one can reliably reward money to the crowd, who are pretty devious in their ability to steal, even from each other. -- Colin (talk) 15:26, 19 October 2014 (UTC)
- There are initiatives out there. Flickr is about to launch a crowd sourcing initiative for content called marketplace. It will be different than what they did with Getty. They are also using image matching technology to index the billions of images stored on their system to at least make them searchable. There is also other crowd sourcing initiatives like CrowdMedia who is looking to leverage all those photos of public events and demonstrations, wars and catastrophes. When people realize they can make money even from their snaps and selfies there will be an interesting shift in the perception of copyright amongst they lay audiences. 15:07, 19 October 2014 (UTC)
- While there are loads of selfies and other trash, there are also photos of public events and demonstrations, wars and catastrophes. These will form part of our global history, yet are neither available under a free licence, nor controlled and vetted by a professional agency. And once the metadata gets stripped off, the only way to use them is illegally. Which not only encourages illegal use, but encourages government to create silly laws that actually permit such theft. I do wonder if there is a commercial opportunity someone is missing out on here, but I can't think of a way to control images that would reliably retain a record of authorship -- DRM of audio/visual is so easily overridden. -- Colin (talk) 10:04, 19 October 2014 (UTC)
- I wasn't aware it was a debate. I was certain it is a given. I thought the debate was whether Free Culturists should care. That aside, collecting societies are trying to free up millions of orphaned works. Flickr, Facebook and Instagram are helping there by creating even more orphan works when they strip metadata including the CMI. However, of those billions and billions of images being copyrighted every few days the vast majority are selfies taken by young girls... copyright is the least of a re-users problem. Saffron Blaze (talk) 22:52, 18 October 2014 (UTC)
- Some people are indeed willing to pay to use my images, but a frustratingly small percentage of commercial users, that's for sure. And that's just surveying the people that are actually polite enough to contact me in advance. I'm sure that's just the tip of the iceberg in terms of commercial re-use and as Saffron says, it's just too difficult to police or keep track of. It won't necessarily stop me contributing, but it is frustrating. I've never understood why an non-commercial/educational-use-only licence was incompatible with Wikipedia's ideals. I understand that there are situations in which educational use could overlap with commercial use since education is rarely completely free of commercial interest, but there must be some way of separating genuine educational re-use from predatory commercial users who cheat photographers out of any benefit 'because they can'. After all, ethics plays no real part in a corporation's activity since the number one priority of any company is profit for its shareholders. There is only the illusion of ethics when a company chooses to take an 'ethical stand' on something because it's usually the result of market research that tells them that an ethical stance might benefit sales. *not cynical*. :-) But yeah, I completely appreciate that it's a problem when images are locked up in copyright for 70+ years and the photographer is no longer contactable to grant permission. I'd probably be happy for a copyright of 5-10 years really on most of my images. Only one in a thousand of my images would really have strong commercial value after 10 years anyway. The rest would likely only have value as an historical record. One thing I don't understand though is why you think that all rights reserved encourages' companies such as the BBC to steal them. At worst, I'd say that it makes no difference at all. Diliff (talk) 18:05, 17 October 2014 (UTC)
- You should probably chat to User:Diliff. I think he's found some people do want to pay, and Public Domain would remove any chance of seeing that income. But I agree completely with forgetting about those who "steal" pictures. Well, except perhaps huge corporations with a brand to protect. They're probably worth fleecing. But seriously, the world is full of horrid people so why go out of one's way to find more? I think one has to either decide to be completely professional and view photography as a self-employed job, which involves a fair amount of chasing people to pay up and making sure nobody takes advantage, or view it as a hobby. I read the other day that with the advent of digital photography, we have gone from there being millions of pictures in the world, to billions of pictures in the world, and with mobile phone photography we are now at the point where over a trillion pictures are taken every year. And nearly all of them are locked up unusable by copyright + 70 years after death. I don't think CC is the whole answer by any means, but neither is "all rights reserved" all over amateur photos on Facebook and Flickr. That actually just encourages people (including BBC, et al) to steal the pictures. (BTW: I wonder how many newspapers paid for the monkey photograph they criticised WP for? -- I bet most claimed "fair use") -- Colin (talk) 16:55, 17 October 2014 (UTC)
- Similarly, I found someone this week uploading my images from here to Flickr, albeit with suitable attribution, but with different license (non-share-alike). Flickr removed the images based on ToS violations and not because of the license issue. It is just too much effort to police. I am returning to the conclusion the only sensible way to contribute to Commons is by donating images to the Public Domain and just forgetting about them. Saffron Blaze (talk) 14:47, 17 October 2014 (UTC)
Got mail
You've a mail. :) Jee 09:16, 13 January 2015 (UTC)
- Replied. Jee 13:25, 19 January 2015 (UTC)
Arlington Row
Saw this
and thought of you. -- Colin (talk) 22:17, 2 February 2015 (UTC)
Haha, you would be the third in the past few days to send me that. I guess my rant against his former little blue car stuck with people. The email exchange between me and the parish council read much like that article except we were funnier. Thanks :-) Saffron Blaze (talk) 22:40, 2 February 2015 (UTC)
Request for comment
Your suggestions are appreciated here. :) Jee 06:54, 27 February 2015 (UTC)
Request for use
11 April at 15:24 pm From: Sherline Pierre-Louis Hello Saffron Blaze, I am asking permission to use your photo on my webpage for a class project. mason.gmu.edu/~spierre2
Thank you , Sherline.
- I will assume it is an image of mine here on Commons. If so, then you are more than welcome. Good luck with the project. Saffron Blaze (talk) 22:34, 11 April 2015 (UTC)
Wikipedia - New Default Image Size avail
It took over a year and some help from the WMF but we can now select in our WP preferences 400px as the default image size: https://phabricator.wikimedia.org/T65440 Saffron Blaze (talk) 01:53, 23 July 2015 (UTC)
Saffron Blaze, I noticed that you are using your own User:Saffron Blaze/license consent and User:Saffron Blaze/license for your images. The requirement for commons images is to use one of the standard copyright tag templates not self-authored, unverified license which is unlikely to be translated to other languages . Any chance you can relicense your images and also add one of the standard CC licenses? --Jarekt (talk) 00:28, 13 August 2015 (UTC)
- No. Cheers. Saffron Blaze (talk) 02:55, 15 August 2015 (UTC)
- And see this too if you didn't notice it so far. :) Jee 03:01, 15 August 2015 (UTC)
- Hi Jee, I did read it, thanks. I won't get involved at this point, as I would only be re-hashing previously stated opinion on this matter. If at some point the licenses I now use are declared not compatible with Commons they may delete the images. Saffron Blaze (talk) 03:13, 15 August 2015 (UTC)
- See User_talk:Chriusha#User:Chriusha.2FLicense, please use at least one valid license tag like the rather restrictive (for commercial re-users) GFDL 1.2 to be on the safe side with your images. --Denniss (talk) 12:59, 2 September 2015 (UTC)
- Saffron, would you consider removing the "Share alike" restriction? It would still maintain your "this resolution only" claim. Of course, it means that if someone adapted your image to a derivative work, they need not (in law) attribute you or maintain the same licence (though an honest person would attribute). It would permit someone to use CC BY-SA for the derivative, say, and this would still not put at risk the higher resolution copy since it would be a different work of copyright. It is the "share alike" that causes the most problems, though the home-made aspect is still not ideal. -- Colin (talk) 18:50, 5 September 2015 (UTC)
- It is not just non-ideal, Those files and files by User:Chriusha are the only files in Category:Files with no machine-readable license which are not in queue for deletion. They are the only files on commons that do not follow the policy about using standard license templates. Also media viewer can not attribute them correctly. When we do database queries to find files without license like this we need to specifically exclude those files. --Jarekt (talk) 01:25, 6 September 2015 (UTC)
- It is because of this edit. This license is very much like {{Attribution}} with a ShareAlike clause, which is also a "non-standard" license. That license even lacks a name. Here it has at least a name, Saffron Blaze Attribution ShareAlike. :) Jee 02:39, 6 September 2015 (UTC)
- Attribution is a must even if "Share-alike/Copyleft" clause is removed. Copyfree licenses allow people to use different licenses in adaptations, including ARR (all rights reserved). In fact, "Share-alike/Copyleft" is not a feature for photographers; it is intended for free culture promoters (like Wikimedia) to encourage free sharing of adapted work too. Jee 02:27, 6 September 2015 (UTC)
- It is not just non-ideal, Those files and files by User:Chriusha are the only files in Category:Files with no machine-readable license which are not in queue for deletion. They are the only files on commons that do not follow the policy about using standard license templates. Also media viewer can not attribute them correctly. When we do database queries to find files without license like this we need to specifically exclude those files. --Jarekt (talk) 01:25, 6 September 2015 (UTC)
- Hi Jee, I did read it, thanks. I won't get involved at this point, as I would only be re-hashing previously stated opinion on this matter. If at some point the licenses I now use are declared not compatible with Commons they may delete the images. Saffron Blaze (talk) 03:13, 15 August 2015 (UTC)
- And see this too if you didn't notice it so far. :) Jee 03:01, 15 August 2015 (UTC)
- The notion my bespoke license is somehow less because it isn't CC issued is bogus. CC with all its legal resources didn't even understand the implications of "work" and put millions in harms's way with respect to retaining some economic control over original files. I am not changing the T&C of my license. I think it will work for the vast majority of people that would want to re-use these images. They may not make the lawyers at some corporate office happy but give the example here perhaps they should be happy they have a job. Saffron Blaze (talk) 23:45, 7 September 2015 (UTC)