Revision as of 16:22, 5 September 2008 editSeicer (talk | contribs)Extended confirmed users20,321 edits Adding discussion for Image:OSU.svg. (TW)← Previous edit | Revision as of 16:22, 5 September 2008 edit undoElonka (talk | contribs)Autopatrolled, Administrators70,960 edits →Image:WomanFirstFamilyAlways.jpg: - replyNext edit → | ||
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* '''Keep'''. The image is not being used to identify the person, but to identify the book. That the book has an image of the author, is coincidental. --]]] 06:53, 5 September 2008 (UTC) | * '''Keep'''. The image is not being used to identify the person, but to identify the book. That the book has an image of the author, is coincidental. --]]] 06:53, 5 September 2008 (UTC) | ||
: For two and a half years, until yesterday, the caption, placed by Elonka, read "Kathryn Sansone, author of ''Woman First, family always'' <small>(Photography by ])</small>": see . That is not a coincidence. ] (]) 07:22, 5 September 2008 (UTC) | : For two and a half years, until yesterday, the caption, placed by Elonka, read "Kathryn Sansone, author of ''Woman First, family always'' <small>(Photography by ])</small>": see . That is not a coincidence. ] (]) 07:22, 5 September 2008 (UTC) | ||
:: I agree that the image caption could have been better worded. Many other editors have reviewed the article though, so it seems a bit odd that you're attacking me for a bit of text from over two years ago. If there's a problem with an image caption, the best way to handle it is to fix it, not to immediately nominate the image for deletion. --]]] 16:22, 5 September 2008 (UTC) | |||
*'''Delete''', as nominator. It seems clear that this is ''not'' fair use. This book cover image is used to illustrate the article ], not an article about the book itself. This doesn't comply with the fair-use notice on the image page. In addition, I suggest it fails more than one of the following "official policy" requirements from ]: | *'''Delete''', as nominator. It seems clear that this is ''not'' fair use. This book cover image is used to illustrate the article ], not an article about the book itself. This doesn't comply with the fair-use notice on the image page. In addition, I suggest it fails more than one of the following "official policy" requirements from ]: | ||
::1. No free equivalent. Non-free content is used only where no free equivalent is available, or could be created, that would serve the same encyclopedic purpose. Where possible, non-free content is transformed into free material instead of using a fair-use defense, or replaced with a freer alternative if one of acceptable quality is available; "acceptable quality" means a quality sufficient to serve the encyclopedic purpose. (As a quick test, before adding non-free content requiring a rationale, ask yourself: "Can this non-free content be replaced by a free version that has the same effect?" and "Could the subject be adequately conveyed by text without using the non-free content at all?" If the answer to either is yes, the non-free content probably does not meet this criterion.) | ::1. No free equivalent. Non-free content is used only where no free equivalent is available, or could be created, that would serve the same encyclopedic purpose. Where possible, non-free content is transformed into free material instead of using a fair-use defense, or replaced with a freer alternative if one of acceptable quality is available; "acceptable quality" means a quality sufficient to serve the encyclopedic purpose. (As a quick test, before adding non-free content requiring a rationale, ask yourself: "Can this non-free content be replaced by a free version that has the same effect?" and "Could the subject be adequately conveyed by text without using the non-free content at all?" If the answer to either is yes, the non-free content probably does not meet this criterion.) |
Revision as of 16:22, 5 September 2008
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September 5
Image:5starr4999049580840020.jpg
- Image:5starr4999049580840020.jpg (delete | talk | history | logs) - uploaded by Michaelbarnett72 (notify | contribs).
- Low quality, absentee uploader, insufficient fairuse. Ten Pound Hammer and his otters • 00:11, 5 September 2008 (UTC)
Image:LOGOnd1.jpg
- Claims both to be the author's own work and a copyrighted logo. Also used on a page currently up for afd, but that's not entirely material. Ten Pound Hammer and his otters • 01:58, 5 September 2008 (UTC)
Image:Ndmeat.jpg
- Copyrighted logo uploaded as pd-self. Ten Pound Hammer and his otters • 01:59, 5 September 2008 (UTC)
Image:Czeslawa-Kwoka2.jpg
- The following discussion is an archived debate of the proposed deletion of the media below. Please do not modify it. Subsequent comments should be made on the appropriate discussion page (such as the media's talk page or in a deletion review). No further edits should be made to this section.
The result of the debate was: speedy closed. This image and the one below were nominated by a user who actually wanted them kept, not deleted. I can't quite fathom the reasons for doing so, but it seems to have been an attempt to disturb the process of a parallel listing at WP:FUR. I note that it really doesn't belong there either; it really belongs at WP:PUI, but in any case, I don't see that it's doing anything constructive here. Fut.Perf. ☼ 11:16, 5 September 2008 (UTC)
- Image:Czeslawa-Kwoka2.jpg (delete | talk | history | logs) - uploaded by Poeticbent (notify | contribs).
- I have removed a "no permission tag". This image is public domain in Poland. Period. Reproducing it in another format (ie film) does not magically add another copyright. I am submitting this for deletion for the community to look at this. I strongly believe NYscholar is wrong. His tag even said "Wilhelm Brasse (an Auschwitz prisoner working under duress) to whom the photograph of Czeslawa Kwoka has been credited in sources provided. The image was captured as a video still and reformatted from a video clip uploaded to YouTube by "tomasmarec". According to Polish copyright law, it is in Public Domain without residual copyrights". He admits it's PD. Hence there is NO reason to delete it. -Nard 03:05, 5 September 2008 (UTC)
- It was not "properly sourced" to the film The Portraitist; the video being used is from YouTube, which apparently stole it from the film or elsewhere (who knows precisely? That's partly the problem). --NYScholar (talk) 07:10, 5 September 2008 (UTC)
- I created the article on The Portraitist, and I provided the information stating that online sources used by Poeticbent and others have apparently been taking material from the film and or other unauthorized photographs of the Museum exhibits and copying it into video compilations and then uploading pieces of those video compilations made from still photographs either made at the Museum by who knows or from the film into images in Misplaced Pages. The uploader has not sourced the material s/he used; I did so, after figuring out where the images were coming from. The uploading is not properly identifying the sources used to make this image. The authors involved would be the Museum, Brasse, and/or the filmmakers; not the uploader and not the creator of the YouTube videos. The uploader does not properly identify sources. The identification of unacknowledged sources is the result of my labor and hard work in developing the sources for the articles on these subjects since approx. Aug. 28, 2008. --NYScholar (talk) 07:10, 5 September 2008 (UTC)
- Disputed elsewhere in Misplaced Pages: See listing of image in WP:NFR and WP:FUR; this user's opinion is simply an opinion; there is no undisputed evidence to support these claims of "public domain" in the United States or Poland. Sources of image? Sources of claims? I had nominated this image for speedy deletion and also placed the missing permission template earlier; this user's reversions are contrary to the notices in the templates not to remove them until the matter is resolved. This matter is not resolved. --NYScholar (talk) 03:38, 5 September 2008 (UTC)
- This image is properly sourced to the film "The Portraitist". You yourself admit it is PD in Poland in your tagging of the image. Per the Wikimedia Foundation's official policy reproducing an out of copyright work does not add another copyright, hence your claims it is copyrighted through the film are invalid. -Nard 03:47, 5 September 2008 (UTC)
- What on earth is the above user (Nard) referring to? I have consistently stated that I do not believe that this photograph is in the public domain, just as I have stated about the other 2 images based on photographs exhibited in 1955 or later and/or published in 2002 or not at all from the Auschwitz-Birkenau State Museum photo archive. I have never said that "PD in Poland" is correct; that is the uploader's additions to templates that I constructed disputing the "public domain" claims; the uploader kept changing the permission needed and disputed fair-use rationale templates that I wrote to add the "PD" claims to them. Those are not my additions. I am going to reconstruct my template questioning this image; it was changed by the uploader and deleted by Nard more recently. This is not proper. The templates say not to remove them until the matters in dispute are resolved, and, despite Nard's definite opinions, they are not definitive or even, in most cases, as I'm saying here, true. --NYScholar (talk) 06:33, 5 September 2008 (UTC)
Image:Czeslawa-Kwoka.jpg
- Image:Czeslawa-Kwoka.jpg (delete | talk | history | logs) - uploaded by Poeticbent (notify | contribs).
- Image published prior to 1976 not in compliance with US formalities. Public domain under Poland's 1994 copyright law (all old photos not registered for copyright PD) and hence not restored by URAA in 1996. Completely legal in Poland and the USA in other words. Image had a tag disputing the licensing saying this "Wilhelm Brasse to whom the photograph of Czeslawa Kwoka has been credited. The still photograph derives from a video clip uploaded to YouTube by "tomasmarec". According to Polish copyright law, it is in Public Domain along with all similar images made before the law was changed. Nevertheless, due to lack of understanding of what constitutes Fair use a wrong copyright tag was initially applied". NYScholar is pursuing these image across Misplaced Pages and Commons even though he admits they are PD. Changing this to a normal deletion so the community can tell this guy to STFU. -Nard 03:14, 5 September 2008 (UTC)
- Once again: I contest that these images taken from YouTube videos (and a blog and a newspaper) are "public domain in the United States" and I contest that they are "public domain in Poland."--NYScholar (talk) 07:15, 5 September 2008 (UTC)
- Disputed elsewhere in Misplaced Pages: See listing of image in WP:NFR and WP:FUR; this user's opinion is simply an opinion; there is no undisputed evidence to support these claims of "public domain" in the United States or Poland. Sources of image? Sources of claims? I had nominated this image for speedy deletion and also placed the missing permission template earlier; this user's reversions are contrary to the notices in the templates not to remove them until the matter is resolved. This matter is not resolved. --NYScholar (talk) 03:39, 5 September 2008 (UTC)
- You admit this image is from a Polish museum and is PD in Poland. So I don't even have to argue against you, you do all my arguing for me. -Nard 03:50, 5 September 2008 (UTC)
- No I do not: I certainly do not admit that the image is taken by the uploader from the Museum; the image is taken by the uploader from a YouTube video and a blog using the same image, and the photographs are part of exhibits in the Museum that the Museum does not allow visitors to photograph at all; the Museum's exhibits constructed from its photo archives with captions that it constructed are not "public domain in Poland"; the uploader states that, and the uploader and/or someone else added that to the speedy-deletion/no-permission template that I placed earlier. You are referring to words that I did not write. Don't tell me what I think. You are distorting the situation due to lack of familiarity with the editing history of the image page and the templates and who wrote what when. There is no permission given to the uploader to copy and upload edited pieces of unauthorized YouTube or blog postings of images that are also copyright-protected (in Poland and in the U.S.) in the film rights of the distributor who presents a clip containing some parts of the same photograph, which it had to do with permission of the Museum, according to Museum policy. The uploader does not own the rights to the image; the YouTube uploader does not own the rights to the image; these amount to theft from the owners of the photographs, who include the Museum, Brasse, and the filmmakers, in their various and complex copyrights. --NYScholar (talk) 07:29, 5 September 2008 (UTC)
- You admit this image is from a Polish museum and is PD in Poland. So I don't even have to argue against you, you do all my arguing for me. -Nard 03:50, 5 September 2008 (UTC)
- Please be advised that both images (above) are a subject of a week long assault by one disgruntled user who does not seem to want to agree with the premises of neither Fair use nor Public domain. Both images were nominated for deletion already several times (with different tags) by this user against the will of a number of editors as well as admins. It might be necessary to take this matter somewhere else before the issue is settled simply because there’s no indication of any positive change. --Poeticbent talk 03:59, 5 September 2008 (UTC)
- I am objecting to the continuing violations of WP:NPA and personal characterizations of me as an editor, which are nonsense. I state unequivocally that I did not place the information about "public domain" in the speedy deletion template; it was added to an earlier version of the the speedy deletion template that I posted by the above uploader and/or others. Moreover, I am not a "disgruntled user"; I am the editor who has contributed most of the current content to the article (including almost all the sources) in which Poeticbent insists on adding these disputed images, even though that person has not contributed much of anything else if anything else to the article content.--NYScholar (talk) 07:02, 5 September 2008 (UTC)
- The images are of dubious copyright status and the image page contains disputed claims of "public domain". The uploader really does not understand the basis for the dispute, and keeps claiming "public domain" without giving any evidence that the images are in the public domain in the United States. The copyright-related tag placed at the bottom of the page by the uploader and the tag relating to public doman in Poland are the work of the uploader; I have nothing to do with them. The template disputing the fair-use rationales and those licenses is mine; it should not be changed by these other users. If they want to add a "hangon" template, they are free to do so. But they should not be deleting and altering (corrupting) the temlate that I posted. I do not think that these images that Poeticbent has uploaded to Misplaced Pages are in the "public domain" in the United States, and I think that the fair-use rationales are misleading, coupled with the tags at the bottom of the page (work of Poeticbent, not I). --NYScholar (talk) 07:02, 5 September 2008 (UTC)
- I reiterate the speedy-deletion templates, which are properly placed. --NYScholar (talk) 07:15, 5 September 2008 (UTC)
- What I object too most strenuously is the obstinance of an uploader of images to jeopardize the article that I added so much work to so that the images can remain in them. If the images don't belong in them, they will be removed. But one would not want the entire article removed due to potential copyright violations due to those images. The notability of the subject of the images (the "identity picture") has been questioned in a deletion request; through much hard work on the article, I and others have managed to rescue it. The uploader's insertion of images with potential copyright violations and dubious license claims of "public domain" do not improve the article; they weaken it. Much as some would like to see these "illustrations" of the poor Holocaust victim who died at 14, if the images are not up to the standards of inclusion in Misplaced Pages, they will be deleted. People can see them in the sources that I and others have cited as source citations in the article, or find them easily enough through any Google search to the subject's name > Images. All of the copyright notices on all of the images in Google warn viewers of them of potential copyright violations, just as Misplaced Pages does in WP:Copyvio: images must be uploaded following WP:POL. That is the bottom line. --NYScholar (talk) 07:41, 5 September 2008 (UTC)
- The above discussion is preserved as an archive of the debate. Please do not modify it. Subsequent comments should be made on the appropriate discussion page (such as the media's talk page or in a deletion review). No further edits should be made to this section.
Image:42798529_pintergrad300.jpg
- Image:42798529_pintergrad300.jpg (delete | talk | history | logs) - uploaded by NYScholar (notify | contribs).
- Non-free image of living person used just to illustrate he was once in the same room with another living person. This can be conveyed in text, which makes this fail NFCC#1. There is nothing special about this photograph. It is not the only photograph of the event and it is hardly iconic, which makes it fail NFCC#8. -Nard 03:41, 5 September 2008 (UTC)
- I guess the above user has been visiting images that I have posted via my contributions history re: images. In fact, I was at this event discussed in the articles it is in and saw such photographs being taken by University press photographers for distribution to the media. NYScholar (talk) 03:52, 5 September 2008 (UTC)
- The false statements above stating reasons that I do not have for uploading it are absurd and simply inventions of the poster, who is involved in a dispute over other images that I had nominated for speedy deletion; he removed the templates that I placed and then went over to this image and added the deletion template on it. If it fails a review, that is fine with me. But I object to the tactics the user is engaging in. He responds to others' charges of "copyright paranoia" on his current talk page (see the link in signature provided via his user page). NYScholar (talk) 03:52, 5 September 2008 (UTC)
- I will say most definitively that he violates WP:AGF in saying that the image is "just to illustrate he was once in the same room with another living person"; what an odd conclusion! NYScholar (talk) 03:52, 5 September 2008 (UTC)
- The image illustrates precisely the event being discussed in the article: the photograph is a posed photograph taken at the event (I was there and saw the ceremony); the image was posted via the publicity department of the University of Leeds, which provided the image for publicity purposes about the event to news organizations. (It was also accessible via the University publicity office; it is no longer at the URL where it once was located; it may be located via the internet archive. I'll see later. NYScholar (talk) 03:52, 5 September 2008 (UTC)
- One of my roles is as a journalist as well as an academic scholar; I frequently have access to press kits. This image is/was in press kits relating to the event. I may re-tag it if I have time and upload it with another fair-use rationale if I have time and if that becomes necessary. I don't have time now. I find the comments of this other poster extremely mean-spirited, wrong, and bordering on if not crossing over the lines of Civility. --NYScholar (talk) 03:52, 5 September 2008 (UTC)
- Melvin Bragg is the Chancellor of the University of Leeds; the photograph was posed because Bragg was giving Pinter the award discussed in the article in which this image is placed, illustrating that event (the giving of the honorary degree); physically, Bragg gave Pinter the award. I dispute this nominator's assumptions and declare them false. --NYScholar (talk) 03:56, 5 September 2008 (UTC)
- Actually it is the only photograph of Bragg and Pinter posed in this precise manner and in their academic garb distributed by the University of Leeds via its publicity department and/or press kit that I know of, and it is published in the BBC News site account of the event because it was distributed to the press via the University of Leeds publicity department and/or press kit. The image depicts a specific event discussed specifically in the article on Honors and awards to Harold Pinter and in the article on Harold Pinter and academia; it is specific to content in both articles. (There may be private people's images of this event, but no one has yet posted any in Misplaced Pages. There is no such photograph posted in Misplaced Pages Commons that I know of. So far this image of Pinter and Bragg in their academic garb is not replaceable.) --NYScholar (talk) 03:59, 5 September 2008 (UTC)
- A photograph does not have to be "the only" photograph of an event to be uploaded with fair-use rationales. I don't know where that idea comes from. It is, however, "the only" photograph that I know of that is still easily accessible for viewing for verification purposes by other Misplaced Pages readers; it is cropped from a larger publicity photograph; it is one of if not the only posed photograph of Pinter and Bragg (and the others in the larger uncropped version) wearing their academic garb; the academic garb is a crucial element to the 2 articles whose content it illustrates; the articles are identified in separate fair use rationales. (I added a second one although the same information applies to usage of the image in both articles.) There is no basis for deleting this image. --NYScholar (talk) 04:37, 5 September 2008 (UTC)
- Strong delete, replaceable photo and does not add significantly to the readers' understanding of the article. Stifle (talk) 14:01, 5 September 2008 (UTC)
- Have developed the context for the illustration further. I do not understand why the above post does not see the image as "significantly" adding to "the readers' understanding of the article"; perhaps the larger context and cross-reference links to Misplaced Pages section in related articel will help. There are two articles, not one, in which this illustration appears, and there are two fair-use rationales provided, one for each usage. Commenters need to consult both articles, not just one, and to keep in mind that both articles are sections split off from the main article Harold Pinter, which has already gone through and passed a "good article" review (with these articles cross-referenced in them). The contexts for both articles are also the cross-referenced main article Harold Pinter. --NYScholar (talk) 14:45, 5 September 2008 (UTC)
Image:WomanFirstFamilyAlways.jpg
- Image:WomanFirstFamilyAlways.jpg (delete | talk | history | logs) - uploaded by Elonka (notify | contribs).
- Non-free use image of a living person. Not necessary for the article and could in principle be replaced by a free image if it were.
- Keep. The image is not being used to identify the person, but to identify the book. That the book has an image of the author, is coincidental. --Elonka 06:53, 5 September 2008 (UTC)
- For two and a half years, until yesterday, the caption, placed by Elonka, read "Kathryn Sansone, author of Woman First, family always (Photography by Suzy Gorman)": see this diff. That is not a coincidence. Richard Pinch (talk) 07:22, 5 September 2008 (UTC)
- I agree that the image caption could have been better worded. Many other editors have reviewed the article though, so it seems a bit odd that you're attacking me for a bit of text from over two years ago. If there's a problem with an image caption, the best way to handle it is to fix it, not to immediately nominate the image for deletion. --Elonka 16:22, 5 September 2008 (UTC)
- Delete, as nominator. It seems clear that this is not fair use. This book cover image is used to illustrate the article Kathryn Sansone, not an article about the book itself. This doesn't comply with the fair-use notice on the image page. In addition, I suggest it fails more than one of the following "official policy" requirements from Misplaced Pages:Non-free content criteria:
- 1. No free equivalent. Non-free content is used only where no free equivalent is available, or could be created, that would serve the same encyclopedic purpose. Where possible, non-free content is transformed into free material instead of using a fair-use defense, or replaced with a freer alternative if one of acceptable quality is available; "acceptable quality" means a quality sufficient to serve the encyclopedic purpose. (As a quick test, before adding non-free content requiring a rationale, ask yourself: "Can this non-free content be replaced by a free version that has the same effect?" and "Could the subject be adequately conveyed by text without using the non-free content at all?" If the answer to either is yes, the non-free content probably does not meet this criterion.)
- The article does not need an image of the subject to explain who she is, and if it did the subject is still alive and so it is not impossible that a free image could be created.
- 8. Significance. Non-free content is used only if its presence would significantly increase readers' understanding of the topic.
- As noted above.
- 1. No free equivalent. Non-free content is used only where no free equivalent is available, or could be created, that would serve the same encyclopedic purpose. Where possible, non-free content is transformed into free material instead of using a fair-use defense, or replaced with a freer alternative if one of acceptable quality is available; "acceptable quality" means a quality sufficient to serve the encyclopedic purpose. (As a quick test, before adding non-free content requiring a rationale, ask yourself: "Can this non-free content be replaced by a free version that has the same effect?" and "Could the subject be adequately conveyed by text without using the non-free content at all?" If the answer to either is yes, the non-free content probably does not meet this criterion.)
- In addition, it fails the specific guideline from Misplaced Pages:Non-free content:
- Cover art: Cover art from various items, for identification only in the context of critical commentary of that item (not for identification without critical commentary).
- Used in an article about the person not the book
- 8. A magazine cover, to illustrate the article on the person whose photograph is on the cover. However, if the cover itself is the subject of sourced discussion in the article, and if the cover does not have its own article, it may be appropriate.
- Agreed that this is a book, not a magazine cover, but I assume the principle is the same.
- 12. Pictures of people still alive, groups still active, and buildings still standing; provided that taking a new free picture as a replacement (which is almost always considered possible) would serve the same encyclopedic purpose as the non-free image. This includes non-free promotional images.
- The fair use rationale for the use of image states "The image is used for identification in the context of critical commentary of the work for which it serves as cover art." I dispute this. Until yesterday it had been explicitly used as a portrait of the author, the subject of the article, and this is still clearly the case. The book is discussed briefly and the image is not required for that discussion: indeed it contributes rather little. Richard Pinch (talk) 07:04, 5 September 2008 (UTC)
Image:OSU.svg
- Although nominated for speedy delete (and deleted) earlier, I restored it given that it was a reproduction of a logo. A discussion on my talk page revealed that reproductions of the logo is not acceptable. seicer | talk | contribs 16:22, 5 September 2008 (UTC)