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File:My Father's Tears and Other Stories cover art for 2009 collection, Alfred A. Knopf.jpg
I'm not sure that
File:My Father's Tears and Other Stories cover art for 2009 collection, Alfred A. Knopf.jpg needs to be licensed as non-free since it appears to be nothing more that the book's title and the author's name on a sky-blue background. Since the book was published by an American publishing company, this would seem to be too simple for copyright protection per
c:COM:TOO United States. The file's non-free use doesn't seem to be problematic per se; the file just doesn't seem to need to be treated as non-free. Any opinions regarding whether this needs to remain non-free? --
Marchjuly (
talk) 12:33, 7 May 2024 (UTC)reply
Certainly does not meet the US threshold of originality for me.
Felix QW (
talk) 14:47, 9 May 2024 (UTC)reply
PD-old-assumed?
File:Edouard Pinaud, Ed. Pinaud.jpg looks more like an advertisement incorporating a colorized/sepia public domain image of
Édouard Pinaud who died in 1868. The source cited is "France, Digital Crown Holdings Limited" and there's also a link to www.ed-pinaud.com. It's not clear what the 2009 date given in the file's non-free use rationale is for, but it might be the publication date of this particular advertisement/image. A Google image search of this the photo found
this unclorized version on Facebook, a colorized/sepia version without the text in
this 2016 blog post and another version of the same image in
this 2009 blog post. It seems that the black-and-white version of the photo should be {{PD-old-assumed}} given the date it was likely taken, but I'm wondering what others might think. --
Marchjuly (
talk) 08:09, 8 May 2024 (UTC)reply
I agree with your assessment; replace with the black & white version and tag PD-old-assumed. He died over 150 years ago.
Stifle (
talk) 10:25, 22 May 2024 (UTC)reply
Copyright status of 1931 image whose author is unknown
It is quite likely to be free of copyright, but some background to its original publication would help confirm that. If it turns out to be an advertisement in a US trade magazine, say, it would be PD for lack of a copyright notice.
Felix QW (
talk) 09:40, 9 May 2024 (UTC)reply
File:Scars Upon My Heart advertisement.jpg
Given that
File:Scars Upon My Heart advertisement.jpg is nothing but factual information expressed as simple text, which is usually not considered eligible for copyright protection, it seems that this advertisement doesn't need to be treated as non-free. Since it's from the UK, though, it might not be something acceptable to move to Commons per
c:COM:UK, but it should be OK to relicense as {{PD-ineligible-USonly}} for local use on Wikipedia. Any reason why this should remain non-free? If it does need to remain non-free, then I don't think it's use meet
WP:FREER and
WP:NFC#CS. Finally, regardless of the file's copyright status, there might be an issue with
MOS:TEXTASIMAGES since it essentially is an image of what's written in
Scars Upon My Heart#Adaptations. --
Marchjuly (
talk) 20:03, 15 May 2024 (UTC)reply
@
Marchjuly: I would agree with your assessment, PD in US only.
Stifle (
talk) 10:23, 22 May 2024 (UTC)reply
Warranty on old knife sleeve
I have an old
Quikut knife with the blade still in its cardboard sleeve, which has a lifetime warranty printed on it. I recall my family bought it in the 1970s.
I took a picture of the knife blade next to the sleeve. The warranty verbiage is similar to
this, although my version says in big capital letters that the warranty is valid "EVEN IF THE DAMAGE IS YOUR FAULT". I'd like to add my photo to the
Ginsu article, which discusses the Quikut brand extensively.
Would this be a non-free image? Is this warranty text copyrighted? If so, the low resolution required would wash out the text, so it may not be worth uploading. ~
Anachronist (
talk) 19:19, 17 May 2024 (UTC)reply
The bot
JJMC89 bot keeps reverting changes. How do I disable the bot on a wiki page? It seems to ignore reverts of its changes.
Ergzay (
talk) 11:44, 18 May 2024 (UTC)reply
@
Ergzay Examples please? If you're specifically talking about image removals, the bot is normally pretty good and the main reason it removes images is that they are non-free images lacking a rationale for the article they had been added to.
Nthep (
talk) 19:06, 18 May 2024 (UTC)reply
Hi
Ergzay. Are you asking about the bots edits to the article "
List of tallest statues"? If you are, then the bot seems to be doing exactly what it's supposed to be doing. The bot explained why it removed
File:Ushiku.jpg from the article in the
edit summary it left. Did you see the edit summary and click on the link included in it? Non-free content is
bascially required to have two things for it to be OK to use in a Wikipedia article: (1) a
non-free copyright license and (2) a separate specific
non-free use rationale for each use. Although a single copyright license is usually sufficient in most cases regardless of how many times a non-free files is being used, a seperate non-free use rationale is required to be added to the file's page for each of its different uses because not all uses of a file may be considered compliant with
Wikipedia's non-free content use policy. You added the Ushiku image to the list article about statues, but you didn't add a corresponding non-free use rationale for that particular use to the file's page; so, the bot did what it's been tasked to do and removed the file. If you want to stop the bot from removing the file, you or someone else will need to add the required rationale for that use to the file's page. However, adding a rationale is
WP:JUSTONE of the
criteria that need to be satisfied for a non-free use to be valid; so, adding the rationale doesn't automatically mean the file's non-free use will still not be challenged or removed. Finally, your edit
here isn't really accurate in terms of Wikipedia's non-free content use policy. Generally, in cases like this, non-free images aren't considered OK to illustrate individual entries in list articles or in tables for the reasons given in
WP:NFLISTS,
WP:NFTABLES and item 6 of
WP:NFC#UUI. Since an image of the statue can be seen in
Ushiku Daibutsu, adding the same file to the list article is considered to not really be needed per
non-free content use criterion #3 (
WP:NFC#Meeting the minimal usage criterion) and the free alternative of linking to the statue's article is considered sufficient per
non-free content use criterion #1 (
WP:FREER). Of course, none of that has to do with why the bot removed the file since the bot is unable to make such assessments, but it's generally what's considered to be the consensus regarding this type of non-free use. You can disagree with this assessment, add the missing rationale to the file's page and then re-add the file to the article if feel is somehow different and should be separately discussed. Doing so, as mentioned above, will stop the bot, but I don't think you'll be able to establish a consensus for this file's use in that particular article at
WP:FFD and stop file from eventually be removed again by a Wikipedia administrator. --
Marchjuly (
talk) 20:55, 18 May 2024 (UTC)reply
Separate question but apparently related to the same bot
No. Even the image has a rationale for the page used, it still removes. I also got this userbox's emblem removed without asking me. I've read the revision summary that the bot left and it said removed NFCC violations. At that time I was so confused that I thought the bot is attempting to thwart my contributions away like a trash. It skips the rationale and removes without notice, like
this userbox.
Kys5g talk! 03:29, 22 May 2024 (UTC)reply
You still have not stated exactly what image and what article this happened at. Its hard to answer your question when you don't provide any details. --
Whpq (
talk) 04:03, 22 May 2024 (UTC)reply
Sorry, I misread and confused you with the original editor posting the question. In your case, the usage fails
WP:NFCC#9. Nonfree content is allowed only in articles. A template or userbox is not an article. --
Whpq (
talk) 04:48, 22 May 2024 (UTC)reply
I am working on creating a sample for my draft of
User:TonyTheTiger/sandbox/Go New York Go. The original 1994 version of the song is 92 seconds. I imagine that I am limited to less than the usual 30 seconds for a sample but I am not sure what the sampling limits are for such a short song.-
TonyTheTiger (
T /
C /
WP:FOUR /
WP:CHICAGO /
WP:WAWARD) 14:12, 18 May 2024 (UTC)reply
Also, can an article have both a link to the youtube video of the song and a 15 or 16 second sample.-
TonyTheTiger (
T /
C /
WP:FOUR /
WP:CHICAGO /
WP:WAWARD) 14:05, 19 May 2024 (UTC)reply