This is an archive of past discussions on Wikipedia:Non-free content. Do not edit the contents of this page. If you wish to start a new discussion or revive an old one, please do so on the current talk page.
(@Hjamesberglen: courtesy ping)
Recently, the articles Armorial of schools in England and Armorial of British universities popped up on this report as the second and third highest article users of non-free content on the project. Given WP:NFLISTS, I removed all the non-free images from those articles, and notified the editor who had placed them as to why I had removed them. In a good faith effort, the editor started two identical discussions on the talk pages of those articles regarding the subject. Given that the talk pages of those articles had seen less than 50 pageviews combined in the last year, I thought it better to bring the discussion here, where there are considerably more eyes. The editor's assertions that we should allow this use are (quoting directly):
---
I would be interested in other editors opinions on this, specifically with regard to the following:
a) the article may be the largest or smallest user of non-free images - this is irrelevant
b) if the rationale is 'insufficent', it can for sure be strengthened, recognising that heraldry is a visual art form and as such an image is essential to the exposition
c) WP:NFLISTS does not prohibit using multiple non-free images, it states they 'should be used judiciously'. I contend this is the case here
---
For my part in responding; I noted their being among the largest article users of non-free content because it highlights the enormous amount of non-free content that is being used. Extreme usage, in my opinion, requires extreme justification. On the rationales; I don't believe they can be strengthened. As is, they are "for illustration" [1]. If non-free content were allowed with the defense that it is "for illustration", there would be no limitation on the use of non-free content on the project at all. WP:NFCC is far, far more restrictive than that. Lastly, it is hard to make a case that using 42 and 35 non-free images in a list article is "judicious". You might make a case that the article can't be complete without the non-free content, and that would be true. But, it doesn't justify undermining WP:NFLISTS and WP:NFCC, and would also undermine Foundation:Resolution:Licensing policy's requirement for minimal use. This used can not be sustained. --Hammersoft (talk) 13:33, 4 July 2022 (UTC)
I don't see how the use of non-free files in this way is justified per WP:FREER, WP:NFC#CS, WP:NFTABLES or WP:NFLISTS. Each of the individual entries in the list appears to have a stand-alone article where each school's crest (COA?) can be seen so there's really no significant gain in encyclopedic information achieved from adding the non-free files to the list articles; this means it's quite hard to avoid seeing their uses in the two articles as anything but WP:DECORATIVE and there's certainly nothing (at least in my opinion) judicious about their non-free use at all. Even the free licensed files probably shouldn't be used per the spirit of MOS:LOGO: just replace the word "logo" with "heraldy" and it pretty much describes why this type of file use is not really encyclopedic even in the case of freely licensed files, but those files aren't subject to the WP:NFCC so NFLISTS doesn't apply. FWIW, you can't really strengthen a non-free use rationale for a non-free use that's pretty much non-compliant from the start. It's like trying to force a square peg into a round hole and you would likely have to rewrite the list articles to such a degree that turns it into something it was never intended to be. If you're going to make such an effort, you'd be better off trying to create stand-alone articles about each individual crest, or add/expand sections about each crest to the articles about each school. -- Marchjuly (talk) 14:12, 4 July 2022 (UTC)
The list article (and I will restrict my comments to the universities as that is a page I have been involved in) is specifically about the heraldry, which is not normally the subject of individual articles (with a couple of exceptions). The use of the images is certainly illustrative/expository rather than decorative – heraldry is visual. Having said that, this is not the primary question here.
The argument about the use of these non-free images seems to hinge on whether this is 'judicious' use of NFC per NFLISTS. The 35 non-free images represent 17% of the images used on the armorial of British universities. This certainly seems like a large number, but it is also the case that each is used once to show the arms of an individual university, so this does seem to meet the requirement of the NFCC: "Minimal number of items. Multiple items of non-free content are not used if one item can convey equivalent significant information". Do they, then, meet the NFLISTS guidance that "non-free images should be used judiciously to present the key visual aspects of the topic"? Certainly they present key visual aspects of the topic (the topic of heraldry being intrinsically visual, and these being the visual representations of the individual coat of arms).
The question then has to come to whether this 'judicious' use. This is something that the guidelines don't particularly define, although they do go on to say (in the next sentence) that "It is inadvisable to provide a non-free image for each entry in such an article or section." That's clearly not what's happening here – a large majority of entries have free images, this is about the 17% that do not.
From further down the NFLISTS guideline, the entry on duplicating use of non-free images may be critical: "If another non-free image of an element of an article is used elsewhere within Wikipedia, referring to its other use is preferred over repeating its use on the list and/or including a new, separate, non-free image. If duplicating the use of a non-free image, please be aware that a separate non-free use rationale must be supplied for the image for the new use." I think this means that the rational for including images on the armorial page rather than leaving it with a link to the article on the university where the image is also used needs to specifically address why it should be duplicated in the list. At the moment, this is not the case – and such a justification needs to be put forward before the images could be re-instated.
A further problem comes from WP:FREER. Heraldic images where the blazon is known can, in principle, be drawn by anyone (the Commons page on Coats of Arms may be useful: https://commons.m.wikimedia.org/wiki/Commons:Coats_of_arms). This is the case for some of these non-free images, but for others only an image is available (which cannot be used as the basis of a free version). Images where there is a blazon thus fail the "no free equivalent" test as a free image could be created. Robminchin (talk) 22:09, 4 July 2022 (UTC)
It has been common practice for many, many years now to have articles like this without non-free images. Discography articles used to be among the highest users of non-free images on the project, for example. That use was deprecated a long time ago, much to the consternation of a lot of people who tried to make a case as you have. We don't permit this use. That it is 17% of the total is meaningless; it's a huge amount of non-free content whether it's 100% or 1%. It's the quantity, not the %. Similar situations exist elsewhere, such as in bibliographies, character lists, equipment lists, and more. We don't permit it because such use dramatically undermines Foundation:Resolution:Licensing policy. --Hammersoft (talk) 22:55, 4 July 2022 (UTC)
I would actually question if the list itself meets the notability guidelines per WP:NLIST. Do sources list out and show all the heraldry of these schools in one single list? There's very little contrast or comparison between them or any reason of grouping (as to contrast on articles covering say banknotes of a nation's currency)? If this is just "oh, it would be nice to have all the coat of arms in one list", that's not a good reason to have the list in the first place and makes that a problem. --Masem (t) 00:03, 5 July 2022 (UTC)
That's a good point about the discographies. It would be good if this prevent precedent were better captured in the guidelines as written. I'm happy to go with that, but I'm not the editor who was including the non-free images. Robminchin (talk) 03:00, 5 July 2022 (UTC)
Would some others mind taking a look at the way this file is being used in New South Wales Police Force strip search scandal? There seem to be a number of NFCCP issues associated with its use in a montage of images in the main infobox, particularly since it's hard to understand why any non-free image is needed in what is essentially a gallery of free images. Perhaps there's a way its non-free use can be justified in the body of the article? -- Marchjuly (talk) 08:49, 22 July 2022 (UTC)
Years ago, I tried and failed to get such mass overuse on currency pages limited. It's not written into policy or guideline anywhere, but currency pages enjoy a situation where WP:NFCC doesn't apply to them. As a result, 14 of the top 25 articles by number of non-free images used are currency articles. --Hammersoft (talk) 05:12, 15 July 2022 (UTC)
Using the Peso article as a problem, we really should have limits on currency article to the front and back of coins or banknote in circulation, and a example of any historical version that is significantly different (like the old design of the us dollar). --Masem (t) 11:29, 15 July 2022 (UTC)
Feel free to try to enforce that. Policy and guideline should reflect common practice. Unfortunately they don't in this case. But, the common practice reality is that currency articles enjoy an exemption from NFCC policy and have for more than ten years (and possibly a lot longer). I once proposed changing the policy to codify this reality, but it wasn't accepted. So, we're left with a situation where policy is ignorant of the long history of currency articles not being in agreement with NFCC policy, and NFCC policy not adjusting to the reality. Reducing the number of non-free images on currency article isn't ever going to happen. --Hammersoft (talk) 12:57, 15 July 2022 (UTC)
Coming at an RFC from a less hostile policy - that while the preference is for a single composite image from the mint/printer agency, it is reasonable to have the front and bank of each of the primary coins and banknotes in current use, but that any historical image or special printing requires complete NFCC#8 compliance which should allow reasonable single examples from historical currency sets. You'll still likely see 10+ NFC images on these pages, but we need to whittle back the 100+ images from Peso. --Masem (t) 13:19, 15 July 2022 (UTC)
Why do you think only the present is significant? A country's history is of importance, too. IIRC, the view when this was previously considered was that the copyright taking in reproducing a banknote was essentially miniscule, given the massive reproduction and circulation such images had already had, that this was the very purpose for which they had been created, and there was therefore no prospect of even considerable fair use disrupting "normal commercial exploitation" of the images. IIRC Jimbo Wales himself took the view that a substantial part of the relevant information about such objects was to know what they actually looked like. Jheald (talk) 13:32, 15 July 2022 (UTC)
Minimizing non-free is not about fair use, so we're not talking issues about copyright taking. We're talking the mission to provide content free of copyright burden, and 100+ images of historic coins and banknotes that are under copyright does not help. You can still explain what people or other objects were memorialized on the older coins/bills without having to see every single one of them (hence the one example reasonable allowance). And having a reasonable allowance for what coins and banknotes are in actual circulation has indefinitely more value than those which are not. --Masem (t) 13:36, 15 July 2022 (UTC)
...except NFC doesn't threaten our free content, nor our mission to create and provide more, unless either it is rivalrous of it (NFCC #1, not the case here); or unless it represents a legal or reputational threat to the whole project (NFCC #2 to #10) -- to which the degree of copyright taking (or perceived degree of copyright taking) is fundamental. That's the basis the entire NFCC were constructed on. Jheald (talk) 13:49, 15 July 2022 (UTC)
Nope, that's the wrong way to consider NFC. Any use of non-free weakens the ability to provide content that can be used and reused freely, particularly in countries where there are no or very limited fair use allowances, so excessive non-free threatens out free content. The hypothetical goal is zero non-free but that's not practical with most contemporary topics, so instead the goal is minimal non-free, enough to support a notable topic. For pages about a country's coins or banknotes which have copyright issues attached, the absolute minimal use that is reasonable is the front and back of the current currency in use (barring things like composite images provided by the mint/press). Historical versions are not necessary unless there is NFCC#8-appropriate context for some inclusion, and even then, including all front/back images would require a great deal of NFCC#8-compliant context (which most pages with historical coins/bills fail, such as the Peso) Masem (t) 14:18, 15 July 2022 (UTC)
That's a rewriting of history. One of the first things the Foundation was asked to rule on was whether NFC was compatible with the GFDL. They replied that it was, because the NFC was considered severable -- inclusion here in no way limited the ability of people to redistribute the free content here without it. As for "minimal", that has a well-defined meaning in copyright case-law: no more than needed for the purpose identified. Which is why the NFC policy directs people to think about what is the educational purpose served by the inclusion of the materal, and is it significant compared to the degree of copyright taking. In the case of old banknotes the degree of copyright taking is miniscule, and the informational value of being able to know what the things actually looked like is significant (given that that is the essentially defining characteristic of a particular banknote). That's the NFCC#8 balance. Jheald (talk) 14:43, 15 July 2022 (UTC)
Just because NFC may be compatible with GFDL doesn't mean that it still doesn't interfere with downstream use and reuse and modification. Reusers of our content are supposed to make sure that non-free content is appropriate for their country and make sure to carry its licenses with redistributed copies, compared to the free parts that require minimal linkage to contributor history. And that doesn't even consider the issue with commercial reusers. Hence the 2008 Resolution sets a different goal for when NFC can be included. Fair use does not enter the picture any more, outside of how it is memorialized into the various NFCC criteria.
And yes, there is a balance of NFCC#8. Including the set of images of current coins/banknotes would be a reasonable "for identification"-like allowance that we have for other works under NFCI#1, with knowning this is likely from ten to twenty images for coins or for banknotes. But any further inclusion of images need stronger context under NFCC#8, and can't just be there to show what the older coins/banknotes look like without supporting text that provides context for why we are showing the image instead of just saying what is on the bill. Likely one can find good source-supported context to describe the fundamental design of the older coins and banknotes, so one example image from historical sets would meet NFCC, but not the whole set. The balance of including every historical version of currency without strong NFCC#8 context does not fly. Masem (t) 15:02, 15 July 2022 (UTC)
The community, as judged by past discussions and 20 years of practise, evidently disagreed/disagrees with you.
As to your first paragraph, again you are re-writing history. At the time the Foundation specifically denied that the 2008 Resolution was intended to be a tightening or change of basis of policy in respect of en-wiki. En-wiki was considered to have already 'put its house in order' by adopting the NFCC, specifically NFCC 2 to 10 which had evolved in respect of fair use, and the more recent NFCC 1 in respect of content likely to discourage free content (notably widely-reused but not copyright-released publicity photos, which had been a particular point of contention, ultimately resolved by Jimmy laying down a line). It was the way this issue had come to a head (and been resolved) on en-wiki which led to the Resolution. The Resolution was intended, according to the people who made it, to confirm what had emerged on en-wiki as best practice, and to spread it to other wikis. Jheald (talk) 17:16, 15 July 2022 (UTC)
Except we have worked to eliminate the nature that the non-free image policy is a "fair use" policy as when they were first made pre-2008. Fair use gives the wrong connotation that you can use lots of images in an educational setting that won't be considered copyright taken, while the Foundation's resolution is about minimizing the amount of non-free to 1) encourage free content to be used instead (which includes text replacements for images) and 2) improve the ability of reusers to use content without having to worry about copyright. The practicality of the before and after may be the same, but the principles and drive are far different, and the current NFC reflects the need to truly seek free content and minimize non-free.
On that basis, the only real arguments that have made this difficult are yours (from the pass discussions), which several editors have expressed the concern with non-free numbers.
There is no reason that one example of an historical piece of currency can't be presented along with a list of what appears on the other forms of that historical currency to replace having multiple non-free images. Eg: if one presented the US $5 note stating that its faces shows Abraham Lincoln and the Lincoln memorial, and then a table for the other denominations to say they have these other figures and landmarks on them, then we can safely assure the reader can envision what those look like, or if they held a copy of a bill, figure out which one lined up. Unless there is more specific discussion on the artwork present on the bill than just identifying what is shown, then any additional bill images for that historical set fails NFCC#8. (Obviously the US currency images are free so that's not an issue here). I mean, with the Peso page, at NFCC resolutions, the art details are lost as to make some of the older images have zero uniqueness (eg comparing the Series B and C images). We're definitely not a site for coin collectors to identify the small changes in coins, and the general reader is not going to recognize the differences, so some of these images need to go. Masem (t) 17:32, 15 July 2022 (UTC)
I adamantly disagree, but there's no point in discussing it. We're just rehashing the same argument from nine years ago, and nothing is ever going to change on the currency articles. There IS a special exception to them from NFCC policy. It's high time that NFCC policy was changed to reflect reality. So, rather than quibble about whether NFCC applies to currency articles or not (it very, very clearly does not), let's get the NFCC policy changed to reflect the reality that's been reality for more than a decade. --Hammersoft (talk) 15:39, 15 July 2022 (UTC)
We don't let a small circle of editors (those interested in currency) force major policy changes. Masem (t) 15:41, 15 July 2022 (UTC)
"Wikipedia is a self-governing project run by its community. Its policies and guidelines are intended to reflect the consensus of the community." If 10+ years of common practice doesn't express consensus through editing, then we might as well void that section of consensus policy. You can't have it both ways. Either WP:NFCC has to be changed or WP:EDITCON has to be changed. In the case of the currency articles, they are mutually exclusive. If you think I am wrong, then do as I suggested above; try to enforce NFCC policy on a currency article and see what happens. All the talking here will amount to nothing, just as it did nine years ago and every other time this subject has come up. We could spin circles around this over and over and over and over and over and over again without resolution, and the reality will remain the same. So either enforce NFCC policy on those articles, or acknowledge that consensus through editing has occurred. --Hammersoft (talk) 16:34, 15 July 2022 (UTC)
I would see the practice with regard to currency images not as an abandonment or exclusion from WP:NFC policy, but as a working-through of its processes and logic to a particular conclusion. Detailed reading of the discussions, which were argued in terms of NFC policy, confirms that was the intention. Jheald (talk) 16:49, 15 July 2022 (UTC)
Maybe that was the intention, but it didn't succeed. The currency articles remain as a massive breakage of NFCC policy. There is no way one can justify as "logical" that 103 non-free images on an article are minimal and within narrow limits. That would be frankly ludicrous, and if it were the case there would be no limitation to non-free content on any article. Sorry Jheald, but you can't have it both ways either. In short, you're both dramatically wrong. I'm the person in the middle telling both of you to change policy either at WP:NFCC or WP:EDITCON. There is no middle ground here where both policies can be right. That is, unless you are both willing to accept that there's an unwritten exemption from NFCC for currency articles. Seeing as how that is very likely not the case, and seeing as how it would appear likely neither of you want to modify policy to fix the situation, there's nothing further to discuss here unless we all want to dance around the bush a few thousand more times. I don't. This debate is absurd. --Hammersoft (talk) 17:31, 15 July 2022 (UTC)
If we were to do another RFC, it wouldn't be as the last one, but to ask the question if the number of images on articles like the Peso or the like are compliant within NFC policy or not, at a more central location like VPP. Depending on how that question is resolved, it then would be a matter of if that does mean we change NFC policy (or more likely adding something at NFCI for the narrow exception for currency articles) if consensus doesn't see a problem with the number of images, or to force those changes to reduce images at Peso /etc and/or to find the right middle ground but with a clear understanding that there needs to be a reduction in images if consensus finds that way. Masem (t) 17:36, 15 July 2022 (UTC)
I am going to contemplate right wording as to the right neutral question, though it will be framed as whether the quantity of images meet NFC. Masem (t) 19:13, 15 July 2022 (UTC)
@Hammersoft: Do you have that link to the list of articles by non-free image count? I need to include that as part of the neutral question for the RFC wording. Masem (t) 13:42, 16 July 2022 (UTC)
So I was looking through that list to pull examples, and I realized that the Mexican Peso one is the only one that "spams" historical non-free images of banknotes (so far). The next one down, Banknotes_of_the_Philippine_peso, uses 20 non-frees to show the current series, and within that, I see a potential reduction by 6 (the same bills reissued with slight color corrections but as to make them effectively duplicative) (there are also problems with reuse of the images on the same page in infobox and summary table, but that's not as critical to address) Most of the currency articles on this list are the same conditions where there is between 10 and 16 non-frees used to show the current bill set in that country, where there are 5-8 bills in circulation and show they are showing the front and bank.
As I have said, I think the use of non-frees to show the current series of bills/coins in circulation is fair under a NFCI#1-like allowance, though like in the case of the Philippine peso, there's attached discussion about the new bills as to enhance the NFCC#8 allowance.
So the biggest problem here is the Mexican Peso's use of historical bill/coin images. And here I would argue in the same way we simply don't allow old company logos (which are copyrighted) without meeting all 10 NFCC points, the same can be said for historical bill/coin images. I would think that a fair allowance to show one set of front/back as an example and then using words to describe what the other bill/coins had is more than enough reasonable allowance while still meeting the minimalization of non-free. The Mexican Peso article which uses >130 non-free images would likely drop to something under 40 (estimated), given that it has both the current coin and bill sets. And of course, there's possible logic that
Presently we have NFCI#3, Stamps and currency: For identification of the stamp or currency, not the subjects depicted on it. I think this needs to be modified to state that this is for only currency in current circulation and then making a footnote (like there is for historic logos under NFCI#2), that explains that historical currency images do not automatically qualify for NFCI#3. Masem (t) 14:01, 17 July 2022 (UTC)
┌────────────────────────────────────┘ Masem, devil's advocate: should we also have non-free images of every Pokémon in current circulation? — Alexis Jazz (talk or ping me) 06:37, 24 July 2022 (UTC)
Again, harping on about the Foundation Resolution as being about the amounts of fair-use content. It really wasn't. Here's Kat Walsh on the Foundation list introducing the Resolution at the time: [2] What are the issues she is highlighting? The big one, which most of the post is devoted to, is that "non-commercial use only, no-derivatives only, or permission for Wikimedia only" was not to be considered free, and was no longer to be acceptable. That is where the flashpoint had been in the previous months (eventually over publicity images), where Jimmy had stepped in and set a line, and it was this that the Foundation was now ratifying, and spreading to other wikis.
Then Kat gets on to fair-use. What is her message here? That fair use is too high and needs to be reduced? A need to narrow the limits? No. That wasn't her focus at all. The Foundation was very comfortable with the NFC policy and levels that had emerged. (As indeed Foundation Legal later confirmed to me at London Wikimania). And at the time of the Resolution we still had full illustrated discographies! No: the focus of that paragraph in Kat's post is very specific: "this non-free media should not be used when it is reasonably possible to replace with free media that would serve the same educational purpose." -- ie specifically NFCC #1. Because this was the issue where there had been controversy and where the Foundation wanted to lay down the line.
So stop trying to claim the Foundation Resolution as a directive to reduce fair use across the board. It wasn't. That's not what the people who were there were trying to so. (As indeed they have been quite clear since). This was not its focus. Claiming otherwise is either ignorant or dishonest. Jheald (talk) 18:24, 15 July 2022 (UTC)
Your understanding of the history ignores the fact that Foundation:Resolution:Licensing policy does contain such a directive; "must be minimal". The NFCC policy at the time spoke similarly "as little as possible". Anyway, I'm tired of this argument. Your opinion has never changed in the slightest, and neither has Masem's, and neither of you is willing to do anything about it either in the form of an RfC to change policy or to enforce NFCC as it is written. Want to dance around the bush again? I don't. --Hammersoft (talk) 18:37, 15 July 2022 (UTC)
I will add thus from Kim's statement:
"While we appreciate the goodwill of those who give special permissions for Wikimedia to display a work this does not fulfill our greater purpose of giving others the freedom to use the content as well, and so we cannot accept media with permission for use on Wikimedia only".
This goes back to my point that NFC's purpose us not about fair use, but about maximizing reuse of material. Nonfree works against that so that's why NFC is about encouraging free images and reducing non free use. Masem (t) 19:11, 15 July 2022 (UTC)
Relating to reuse of material: despite the US dollar being public domain it appears to have a large number of restrictions placed upon its use under federal law (as expected). [3] Would that not be classified as impeding reuse, same as copyright impedes non public domain bank notes? - nathanielcwm (talk) 13:39, 17 July 2022 (UTC)
Of the three points, I don't think any apply, displayed size is <75%, and our use of them is done when WP is done. Masem (t) 13:44, 17 July 2022 (UTC)
I am reminded of when the FBI attempted (and failed) to have Wikimedia remove its seal from Commons. I dare say the U.S. government would have a similarly difficult time trying to remove U.S. currency images from Commons. --Hammersoft (talk) 01:48, 18 July 2022 (UTC)
SVG film posters
I've started a discussion at Wikipedia talk:WikiProject Film#SVG_film_posters regarding the potential for using SVG for film/movie posters. I'm soliciting feedback on an image I've already uploaded with an eye towards doing more if the example proves to be acceptable/popular. Please reply at the discussion there. Thank you! —Locke Cole • t • c04:14, 4 August 2022 (UTC)
Concept car photos
Is it allowed to use a non free press release photo of a concept car from a long time ago when there are no free photos available?
Or is it not allowed.
Trying to work on the Saturn Curve to expand the article and wondering if its allowed Qwv (talk) 20:54, 14 August 2022 (UTC)
If the article is one about a failed but notable car design that never got to manufacturing, then yes, but I'm looking at the state of that article and you likely need to show its notability with a lot more sourcing before a non-free could be used. --Masem (t) 23:06, 14 August 2022 (UTC)
Technically they are, but they are also automatically included by the Wikimedia code, not something purposely placed on a page by an editor. Its been discussed here before but while I am opposed to NFC's inclusion on search results, I do recognize that we can consider that as something we cannot control nor is something that can be abused by WP editors to drive more NFC inclusion in articles. --Masem (t) 13:32, 9 October 2022 (UTC)
Is there no possibility to augment the search display with filtering that allows the removal of images? I understand that it probably isn't an existing function but something like an exclusion list of categories would work. Whpq (talk) 13:57, 9 October 2022 (UTC)
I know in the link Kusma's provided that there are CSS options to strip the images completely, but realistically, the WMF code should only include the first image from each article iff there is a clear free-content license on it, which I know the media viewer absolutely knows how to do. Masem (t) 13:59, 9 October 2022 (UTC)
Or it should be disabled on all Wikimedia wikis that contain non-free content. Grabbing an image from a page without checking only works in a free content environment, so not on the English Wikipedia. —Kusma (talk) 14:38, 9 October 2022 (UTC)
Taking off my staff hat for a moment, does the fair use policy in terms of how it applies to articles itself need tightening? If there is abuse of the policy occurring, then what can we do to solve that? Seddontalk21:05, 11 October 2022 (UTC)
At least on en.wiki our NFC policy is fine. Its just that it does allow many articles to lede with a non free image (such as for most copyrighted works), which is what the new search results page is showing. Masem (t) 22:26, 11 October 2022 (UTC)
@Seddon: Well, you tell us. The project now has over 710,000 non-free images on it. I believe (though I can't prove definitively) that en.wikipedia is the largest repository of non-free images on the planet. From my chair; for a putatively free project, we have an absolutely insane amount of non-free content. --Hammersoft (talk) 23:44, 11 October 2022 (UTC)
File:Ayu symbol.svg
I'm looking for input on the non-free use of File:Ayu symbol.svg in Ayumi Hamasaki album articles. This is sort of similar to File:Prince logo.svg, but it's respective uses appear much more WP:DECORATIVE than Prince's symbol in that it's not being used in the article about the artist and there doesn't seem to be any critical commentary about it in any of the aritcles. It's basically a stylized "A" that's added as a parenthetical (e.g. "Stylized as ...") in the lead sentence of each article, but it's not being mentioned anywhere else that I can find. So, the first question is whether this needs to be treated as non-free. If it does, then the next question is whether it's meeting WP:NFC#CS for any of its uses. -- Marchjuly (talk) 05:23, 18 October 2022 (UTC)
Non-free use post-AFD merges and post-AFD redirects
I'm wondering if some others think about the non-free use of File:Spiffy Pictures logo.png in David Rudman#Spiffy Pictures. The file was originally being used in Spiffy Pictures, but that article was redirected to the Rudman article per Wikipedia:Articles for deletion/Spiffy Pictures. Very seldom do AFDs that end in "redirect" or "merge" closes discuss non-free image use if there are non-free files being used in the article in question, and this one was no different. I think the participants just assumed that the new way the file was being used would be automatically OK and didn't give it much thought. This kind of thing isn't too rare and non-free images usually tend to get merge or redirected with text content whenever it happens. It's sort of covered in WP:NOBODYCOMPLAINED and WP:OTHERIMAGE, but may be it would be worth considering further clarifying things in some way. Maybe a note to #2 of WP:NFCI like is done for former logos or maybe a note to WP:NFC#Implementation about how moving an image to a new locations means its rationale might no longer be valid. Ideally, something should also be eventually added to WP:BEFORE and WP:AFD/AI, at least in my opinion, but perhaps just clarifying things on NFC related pages first would be a good place to start. -- Marchjuly (talk) 02:12, 21 November 2022 (UTC)
Is an "open content" a "free content"?
The first sentence ("Wikipedia's goal is to be a free content encyclopedia, with free content defined as content that does not bear copyright restrictions on the right to redistribute, study, modify and improve, or otherwise use works for any purpose in any medium, even commercially.") redirects to the Free-culture movement article, but the article has several subtopics, and one of them is "open content". CC belongs to the "open content" category. Meanwhile, "redistribute, copy and modify with attribution" may be considered, to some degree, as a restriction. In connection to that, are files that are under CC considered "free" per this policy? Paul Siebert (talk) 19:40, 9 December 2022 (UTC)
No. That's why we (the WMF, exactly) specifically define free content as those that can be redistricted and modified by anyone w/o any limitated outside of attributing the original works (like CC-BY-SA is fine, but not CC-BY-NC since that restricts commercial use). Masem (t) 19:54, 9 December 2022 (UTC)
SA and NC are not mutually exclusive. You can have a CC BY-NC-SA licence. [4] Sharealike and attribution are restrictions, but we do allow these licences. CC NC licences are not, so not all CC licences are acceptable. Hawkeye7(discuss)20:58, 9 December 2022 (UTC)
NC is non-commercial, meaning that only non-commercial entities can use the content freely; commercial entities would need to seek a proper license to reuse. That type of restriction is incompatible with the free content aspect. Masem (t) 21:14, 9 December 2022 (UTC)
It is usually acceptable, even though the attribution requirement may be quite onerous, burdensome and restrictive. Note WP:WATERMARK: Free images should not be watermarked, distorted, have any credits or titles in the image itself or anything else that would hamper their free use. In such cases, a CC-BY-SA image might not be acceptable. Hawkeye7(discuss)21:40, 9 December 2022 (UTC)
Russian Ministry of Defense site
I an not sure if that is a correct place for asking this question, but...
I remember that Russian Ministry of Defense published many historical photos on its web site, and each page was supplemented by a disclaimer that the content is free. It seems it was under CC-SA, but I am not sure. Currently, these pages are not available (probably, because, due to the war, Russia closed access to her official sites from abroad). Can we still consider images from the Ministry of Defense web sites that had already been uploaded to Wikipedia or Wikimedia acceptable? Paul Siebert (talk) 16:18, 13 December 2022 (UTC)
Hi Paul Siebert. It's not clear what you mean by acceptable. Do you mean "acceptable" from a general copyright standpoint? Do you mean acceptable from a non-free content use standpoint? Do you mean acceptable from a contextual standpoint? Generally, files which have been released under a free license (for example, the Creative Commons licenses mentioned here and here) are OK to upload locally to Wikipedia or globally to Commons (Commons is better) as long as you can be sure that the person issuing the license is the original copyright holder; so, if the photos on Russian Ministry of Defense's website were originally taken by the ministry and then first published under an acceptable free license by the ministry, then they should be OK. If they were taken by someone other than the ministry but are just being used by the ministry on its website, then you may need to narrow down the provenance of the photos a bit to try and figure out who took them, when they were taken, where they were taken and when they were first published. Old photos can be tricky to sort out because they obviously pre-date the Internet even though you may find them posted on various websites. Simply hosting a photo on a website generally doesn't equate to a transfer of copyright ownership, and that's what needs to be assessed. Even in the US, not all content hosted on official US government websites is the original work of US government employees; so, such works aren't automatically public domain because the US government is using them. A Creative Commons licenses never really expires and it can't be revoked per se as explained here; so, if it can be verified that the photos were licensed as such by the Ministry of Defense and were also the original work of the ministry, then again they should be OK to upload even though the website is no longer accessible. You can try using something such as the Internet Archive to see whether you can find an old archived version of the website which shows the photo and its license. You can also trying looking in books or other print publications for the same photos, to try and narrow down their respective provenances. You might also want to take a look at c:COM:Russia for a brief overview of Russian copyright law as it applies to uploading files to Commons. As for the other two possible questions, non-free use needs to meet all of the criteria listed here, which once again means needing to know as much about the provenance of the image as possible. The most difficult of the criteria to satisfy tend to be WP:NFCC#1 (WP:FREER) and WP:NFCC#8 (WP:NFC#CS), but all of the criteria need to be met for a use to be considered acceptable. Some types of non-free uses are typically considered unacceptable per WP:NFG, WP:NFLISTS and WP:NFC#UUI; so, using a photo in one of these ways might be quite difficult. As to whether it's generally contextually OK to use such images even if they're freely licensed, it's hard to say. Adding certain images to articles might not be always seen as an improvement by some users and disagreements over whether to do so may need to be resolved via WP:DR by discussing the matter on the article's talk page and trying to establish a consensus to use the image. -- Marchjuly (talk) 22:00, 13 December 2022 (UTC)
Ok, it seems I was not completely clear. Let me clarify it.
Recently (I don't know exactly the date, I just remember that I saw it some time ago), Russian Ministry of Defense published a number of historical photos on their web site, and it supplemented it with a disclaimer that the content is under a CC license. Later, some of those photos were uploaded to English Wikipedia or/and Wikimedia with a reference to the Russian Ministry of Defense. However, now the links to their web site are not working, and my hypothesis is that that happened due to the war and a general shift of Russia to isolationism.
In connection to that, can these photos be used as CC-SA images in English Wikipedia even in a situation when their actual status cannot be verified (the links are not working)? Paul Siebert (talk) 22:08, 13 December 2022 (UTC)
Creative Commons licenses are, in principle, non-revocable and content licensed as such can continue to be used as long as the terms of the original license are being met. The catch is that the content needs to be released by its original copyright holder for the license to be considered valid. You can't release someone else's creative work under a CC license without obtaining their WP:CONSENT (or c:COM:CONSENT) to do so. Do you have any reason to believe that the photos found on the ministry's website weren't created by the ministry itself? Have you seen the same photos being used on other websites or in other publications where they are being attributed to someone other than the ministry or being claimed as being protected by copyright. Of course, it would be ideal if the links to the ministry website still worked, but the fact that they don't doesn't automatically make the original licenses invalid and the original licensing might still be able to be verified by looking for archived versions of the website (like these) or looking for the same images in other publications.If you're concerned that the original licensing might be a case of license laundering, then you can always start a discussion about them. For files uploaded locally to Wikipedia, you can use WP:FFD; for files uploaded to Commons, you can use c:COM:DR. Generally for files uploaded to Commons, the Commons precautionary principle would seem to apply in a case where there's significant doubt about a file's licensing and the burden would fall upon the file's uploader to provide sufficient evidence to establish a consensus that the license is valid. The same, in principle, could also be applied to files uploaded locally to (English) Wikipedia under a free license. Since this doesn't sound like a non-free content issue, maybe it would be better to move this discussion to WP:MCQ for files uploaded locally to Wikipedia and c:COM:VPC for files uploaded to Commons. It would also be helpful if you could provide the names of the files when discussing them at MCQ or VPC because that will help others assess whether there's a licensing problem. -- Marchjuly (talk) 00:31, 14 December 2022 (UTC)
Actually, I meant several files, including this one: [5]. I found the archived web page where it was taken [6], but the file itself was not archived by Wayback machine. I remember it is the first file on that page. There are several other historical photos on the mil.ru page, some of them were archived, and they are available from Wayback machine.
At the bottom of each mil.ru page, you can see the disclaimer: "Все материалы интернет-портала Минобороны России доступны по лицензии Creative Commons Attribution 4.0", which I translated as "all materials from this Internet portal are available under Creative Commons Attribution 4.0".
A "Creative Commons Attribution 4.0" for a photo only would be valid if the Russian Ministry of Defense owns the copyright for the photo. Moreover, a copyright license at the bottom of a website only applies to original content posted on the website; it doesn't (to the best of my understanding) apply to content hosted by the website that was created by someone else. Under United States copyright law, photos taken by government employees as part of their official duties are considered to fall within the public domain from the moment they're taken; in other words, they aren't not eligible for copyright protection and a CC license would be inappropriate for that reason. This is why many combat photos taken by military personnel as part of their official duties can be found on Commons. I'm not sure whether the same can be said for Russian copyright law; if it can, then photos taken by Russian soldiers as part of their official duties might also be public domain. File:Raising a flag over the Reichstag 2.jpg (Raising a Flag over the Reichstag) is attributed to Yevgeny Khaldei and in general that would make him the copyright holder. Since he's dead, his copyright ownership would've, in principle, passed to his estate. It's possible that Khaldei officially transferred his copyright ownership to someone else. It's also possible that the photo was sort of a work for hire in which he was paid to take photos, but the rights of the photos belong to whomever paid him. A Creative Commons Attribution 4.0 license implies that the work is still protected by copyright and not within the public domain; the question then might be to determine who actually is the copyright holder of the photo. If it's not the Ministry of Defense, then the CC license wouldn't be valid. One thing about Commons is that file licenses aren't usually vetted or otherwise double checked by a third-party before a file is uploaded. Bascially, it's just assumed that the uploader knows enough about copyright law to make a reasonable assessment of the copyright status of the file they're uploading. Some people, however, don't do very much digging and just assume that whatever they find on a source website is OK; so, if a source website states the a file is licensed as Creative Commons Attribution 4.0, then the source website it simply taken at its word (so to speak). Things, however, are sometimes more complicated since not all the content hosted on many websites is original content created by the websites' owners. Whether that is the case here might be something worth asking about at c:COM:VPC which is why I started a discussion about the file at c:COM:VPC#File:Raising a flag over the Reichstag 2.jpg. -- Marchjuly (talk) 06:09, 14 December 2022 (UTC)
Looking for help checking on some likely F7 violations
I'm looking for one or more people who would be willing to help check the non-free file uploads of Entercontainment for WP:FREER and WP:NFC#CS violations. I've just gone through 34 of them them starting on January 1, 2023 and going back to October 2, 2022 and tagged nine for speedy deletion, which means a little more than 26% have NFCC issues. Not all of the uploads are questionable, but the ones I found are screenshots from old TV programs or films being added to filmography sections even though there is a free equivalent image being used in the main infobox. There seems to be many more files (perhaps 100 to 200) going back to March 2021 that probably should be checked for the same issues as the nine I've already found. It's a bit tedius for sure, but probably would go faster if more than one person was doing the assessing. FWIW, I think these files (at least the ones I found so far) were uploaded in good faith; it's just that they seem to cleary be WP:NFCC#1 and WP:NFCC#8 violations. Most of the rationales are claiming that a free equivalent couldn't be found, but I think that's likely just boilerplate text that's displayed by default with a non-free use rationale template is used. -- Marchjuly (talk) 07:41, 4 January 2023 (UTC)
The following discussion is closed. Please do not modify it. Subsequent comments should be made on the appropriate discussion page. No further edits should be made to this discussion.
Proposing revision to non-Free image policy. Sometimes new software features will display relevant article images somewhere outside of the article, for example ArticlePreview pop-ups and mobile RelatedArticle links. Foundation staff are respecting non-Free content policy, and each new feature can be configured to either include or exclude non-Free images as appropriate. Consensus approved non-Free images in ArticlePreviews, as you are viewing a cropped version of the article itself with the image in educational context with related article text. On the other hand the RelatedArticle feature excludes non-free images. Policy calls out navigational use as unacceptable for non-Free images.
On-wiki search results now include images, with non-free images currently excluded. Like Article Previews, search shows the image along with a cropped view of the article text. However search only shows about half as much text as Previews. For some portion of readers, the image + displayed article text in the search result may be a sufficient view of the article to fulfill their educational purpose for seeking that article, without needing to load the article page itself.
Support exemption. I see it as a bit borderline because the text-preview-snippet is getting rather short. Nonetheless it is still essentially an article-preview, the image is in educational context with the article text, and I find it persuasive that some portion of readers will have their educational need fulfilled by that preview. Those readers can be well served without needing to continue on to the article page. Alsee (talk) 16:46, 4 December 2022 (UTC)
Oppose on a similar issue that I put forth in the article preview - this extension from the WMF should first allow us to specify an image in use on the page as the representative image than simply pulling the first one. This would allow a free image to be used in this place instead of a non-free infobox image (which right now there is no image shown in this case for non-free images). To add that the amount of prose from the article shown is far less than the article preview and may not even be the first portion of the lede, so the claim this NFC is being used to support context-appropriate prose is wrong. --Masem (t) 16:53, 4 December 2022 (UTC)
Oppose - If the issue is that the text previews are getting too short then the answer would be to expand the text, not to skirt up against fair use unnecessarily by adding non-free images to the search results. Since (in my opinion) expanding the text would solve the issue, there is no need to carve out another exemption in WP:NFC which should only be done as a last resort if there is no other answer to a problem. - Aoidh (talk) 17:28, 4 December 2022 (UTC)
Oppose - the text snippet in search results is in no way "essentially an article-preview", and does not provide the context needed to satisfy the contextual significance claimed. -- Whpq (talk) 17:47, 4 December 2022 (UTC)
Oppose exemption. If we wanted to allow non-free images in small snippets, we would change WP:NFLISTS and have non-free images in user-curated discographies. I oppose that, and strongly oppose giving algorithms more rights than humans here. —Kusma (talk) 17:48, 4 December 2022 (UTC)
Oppose My wish for English Wikipedia is that it disallow non-free images entirely. That is not the current practice, so at least I recommend against expanding it. For as long as we have non-free images here, then we fail to invest in alternatives which work for Wikipedia language versions which have no choice but to disallow non-free images. Bluerasberry (talk)00:04, 5 December 2022 (UTC)
Support If an image is acceptable in an article then it is acceptable in abbreviated versions of that article. For example, the mobile view shows articles in a compressed format in which the sections just appear as titles and have to be clicked to be expanded. Search results are similar in that they will present some abbreviated or compressed view of an article. There should be reasonable freedom to do this in an intelligent way which helps the reader best. Andrew🐉(talk) 21:37, 9 December 2022 (UTC)
Support Per Andrew Davidson. We should enhance the readers' experience. Contrary to Bluerasberry, my wish is for allowing non-free images, providing the readers with the best possible free encyclopaedia rather than providing corporations with the right to exploit our work for their profits. Hawkeye7(discuss)21:47, 9 December 2022 (UTC)
The very licensing of Wikipedia content means corporations can (and do) profit from our work. It's the nature of the beast, and that isn't going to be changed or ameliorated by allowing or not allowing these images to appear in search results. --Hammersoft (talk) 22:36, 9 December 2022 (UTC)
Our internal search function is already considered poor. If it is deliberately munged for ideological reasons then commercial search alternatives such as Google are more likely to be used instead. Our readership is then inconvenienced and Google eats our lunch by selling more advertising. What do we get out of this? Andrew🐉(talk) 11:08, 10 December 2022 (UTC)
Oppose I don't see that this is important or useful enough to make it yet another exception to NFC. And per Masem, it would be technically trivial to avoid it anyway. Black Kite (talk)11:16, 10 December 2022 (UTC)
Support, strategically. I'm not fully sure whether or not this use abides by fair use laws (which I know better than most, but which are notoriously complex, and which I don't trust most of the !voters above to understand), but if there are any issues, I expect the WMF legal team to overrule us. Therefore I'd like to see us find consensus to support, throwing it to them. {{u|Sdkb}}talk04:01, 3 January 2023 (UTC)
Oppose: our policy is, and can be, more conservative than the law. Article Previews have a navigational purpose but they do also have a purpose of allowing the reader to learn about the topic without having to fully open the article; there, use of non-free images can be argued to have a contextual significance (NFCCP#8). For search results, I think this argument would be much weaker: the text you are shown is shorter, not the start of the article but the fragment containing the relevant text, and the focus is navigational. A reader would rarely gain information from the search page that means they don't need to click on the relevant article. — Bilorv (talk) 14:57, 3 January 2023 (UTC)
Neutral Sounds like a good idea but not sure if the WMF legal team would support this but i would support this if the WMF is not opposed to this. Qwv (talk) 23:47, 5 January 2023 (UTC)
Weak oppose per Bilorv. There's no question that there is a valid fair use justification for using the images in search results (see: Google's knowledge box). I believe that fair use images have a good and reasonable place in articles to provide additional context to readers when no other suitable images exist to depict something, but I don't think that the Δvalue for our users is nearly as much when we're talking about search results. — Red-tailed hawk(nest)22:31, 6 January 2023 (UTC)
The discussion above is closed. Please do not modify it. Subsequent comments should be made on the appropriate discussion page. No further edits should be made to this discussion.
I've been thinking about WP:NFCC#4 and WP:NFC#Meeting the previous publication criterion a bit and been wondering whether it needs a bit of tweaking. Most NFCCP issues seem to be related to WP:NFCC#1 and WP:NFCC#8, at least that those two seem to be one of the main reasons why a lot of non-free files end up deleted. For sure, WP:NFCC#7 deletions are also quite common, but those can be considered to be WP:SOFTDELETEs and files deleted for WP:F5 reasons are often WP:REFUNDed if the F5 issue is subsequently resolved.
NFCC#4 currently states as follows, "Non-free content must be a work which has been published or publicly displayed outside Wikipedia by (or with permission from) the copyright holder, or a derivative of such a work created by a Wikipedia editor." The first part of that sentence seems fairly straightforward (at least to me) in that official sources of copyright content should be used whenever at all possible since it helps in establishing the en:provenance of the content, helps in assessing any possible commercial value, and helps in determining things like WP:COPYLINK. However, lots of non-free files aren't really sourced to original copyright holders, but are rather sourced to WP:CONVENIENCE link types of sites. Lots of movie posters comes from sites like IMDb; screenshots or other images may come from some fan page, blog, or even YouTube; logos and flags may come from sites like Logopedia of Flags of the World. In most of these cases, these are all user generated sources where images copyright might not be too much of a concern to the host site's operator or the user uploading the content.
Is it OK to just assume that such convenience links are OK as sources for NFCC#4 purposes just because somewhere along the line the content just had to have been published somewhere or in someway by the original copyright holder? Any content pre-dating the Internet age may have been published in some sort of print publication somewhere, but it's where the content is found being used on the Internet that typically given as the source even if there's zero information provided by the host website about the original copyright holder. Should be really allowing non-free content in which the source is given essentially "unknown"? -- Marchjuly (talk) 22:48, 20 January 2023 (UTC)
We've never really enforced that the source link be the true original source, only that the source link is reasonable for authority that the image is of what it depicts. For example, using a movie poster off IMDB is fine though using the image from the distributor directly would be best, but as long as we aren't using a random imgur.com link as the source, that's fine. We want some reasonable assurance that there was prior publication of the image from sources with authority to say that. Masem (t) 00:20, 21 January 2023 (UTC)
I can understand the justification for using IMDb for things like movie posters, Discogs for things like record album covers, newspaper.com or major media sites for photos and the like, but what about -pedia sites, Wiki sites, personal blogs, fan pages or forums for such content. I probably could site some examples I've seen, but don't want to really single out one user in particular since it's not just one user. Unlike perhaps Ebay or sites where photos are sold, user-generated sites tend to crop or alter images in such way and provide very little information about image provenance. Are such sites really OK to use as source? -- Marchjuly (talk) 00:58, 21 January 2023 (UTC)
Non-free images of still living persons convicted of a crime yet only incarcerated for a comparatively short period of time
I understand that non-free images of still living persons convicted of a crime are often allowed per WP:FREER, particularly when the person has been sentenced to very long prison terms with no real hope of parole. However, I'm wondering about the non-free justification of File:Yuka Takaoka.jpg in Yuka Takaoka. While Takaoka's crimes are pretty bad, she was only sentenced to 3.5 years in prison and that was in December 2019. Of course to her, 3.5 years might be a long time, but I don't think it typically would be considered long term incarceration. The article was created about a week ago and the image was uploaded the day after, and there is some discussion of the subject's appearance in the Yuka Takaoka#Social media attention; however, I'm not sure whether that would be in and of itself sufficient justification for non-free use if Takaoka wasn't currently incarcerated. Given that a free equivalent image would seem to be possible if she's released from prison as scheduled, my question is whether non-free use for those one or two months is really appropriate. -- Marchjuly (talk) 08:02, 25 January 2023 (UTC)
We can wait 3.5 years for the end of incarceration. It would be something on the order of decades - comparable to a standard copyright term - that we would consider the chance for a free replacement unlikely and allow the use of a non-free. Masem (t) 13:20, 25 January 2023 (UTC)
She's getting out of prison in 5 months at the most. We can easily wait. There is no justification for having a non-free image of her like this. I've tagged the image for rfu, notified the uploader, and captioned the use of the image. --Hammersoft (talk) 13:46, 25 January 2023 (UTC)
Thank you Masem and Hammersoft for taking a look at this. I could possibly see arguing for something like this at the beginning of person's sentence, even if they're not likely going end up being incarcerated for decades; however, I was having a hard time finding any justification at all for the non-free use of an image of someone who has just a few months left in their sentence, unless there was some really strong argument to be made for the need of the a non-free image per WP:NFC#CS specific to the particular image and not just a random image of Takaoka being used simply for primary identification purposes. -- Marchjuly (talk) 01:01, 26 January 2023 (UTC)
That's why I point out that our differentiator tends to be the "decades" that we'd otherwise wait for a copyright term to expire. Someone incarcerated for life with maybe parole in 30 years who otherwise is notable is a fair case for a non-free image. But below 5-10 years, that is usually something we can wait for. Masem (t) 01:29, 26 January 2023 (UTC)
I'm not necessarily disagreeing with you Masem. What you posted makes perfect sense to me. However, as is the case with non-free images of recently deceased individuals, having unofficial periods of time before non-free use is considered accpetable seems to be a point of contention among many members of the community. For some being incarcerated for 5-10 years might be a more than sufficient time to justify the non-free use of such an image. Most of the non-free images of still-living incarcerated persons that I comes across are ones for persons sentenced to life (or the equivalent) with relatively zero chance of parole. So, I'm just curious as to whether there has been any prior discussion about the non-free images of incarcerated individuals in which a clear distinction was made between long term and short term incarceration, or being eligible or not eligible for parole. -- Marchjuly (talk) 02:29, 26 January 2023 (UTC)
Let me use File:Mouli Cohen.jpg as an example. Samuel "Mouli" Cohen was convicted of money laundering and fraud among other things in April 2012 and was sentenced to 22 years in prison. The non-free file of him being used in the main infobox was uploaded back in 2012 and has been used since then. Is a 22 year sentence enough of a justification per FREER for this type of non-free use? If Cohen serves the full 22 years, he will be released in 2034. The article makes no mention of the possibility of parole, but maybe he gets out of prison earlier than 2034. Is there some point in time where a non-free image might be justifiable in 2012, but is no longer justifiable in 2023 simply because the incarcerated person has now served almost half their sentence? -- Marchjuly (talk) 02:40, 26 January 2023 (UTC)
I don't see why people with short-ish terms should not get temporary non-free images for the duration of their incarceration. It is just as hard to get a photo of someone incarcerated for 3 years as 30 years. Instead, I propose: People with less than 1 year remaining are not eligible for a non-free image. Otherwise, a non-free image may be uploaded for any incarcerated individual following a good-faith comprehensive attempt to search for free images available online, to be deleted one year prior to their release. This way, we get to have the article illustrated for most of the time during which it is infeasible to obtain a free image, while still encouraging people to take a free image once they get out by making an impression on people's heads during the final year that the article is image-less. -- King of ♥ ♦ ♣ ♠08:53, 26 January 2023 (UTC)
Because in general, we can wait a year for free imagery to emerge for a topic as long as we have reasonable assurance on the time frame, eg like pictures of buildings being constructed. Masem (t) 21:09, 26 January 2023 (UTC)
I think that a distinction probably needs to be made between persons for which a BLP article already exists prior to them being being convicted of and incarcerated for some crime and persons for which a BLP is newly created solely because they committed some crime. In the first case, Wikipedia notability is established for reasons other than any significant coverage they might have subsequently received for committing a crime; in that case, regardless of the length of their sentence, it would seem inappropriate non-only for NFCCP reasons but also most likely because of WP:MUG (if the photo was something specifically related to their crime) reasons to allow any non-free image to be used. A non-free image wouldn't really be allowed as long as the person was still living per FREER if they never ended up in prison; so, I don't see why one should be allowed just because they committed a crime that resulted in being incarcerated. The other case, perhaps, is a bit more difficult to assess. There's generally a positive correlation between crime severity and length of sentence, right? So, people convicted of really bad crimes that tend to attract the kind of significant coverage needed to establish notability tend to be receive much longer sentences that those who don't, don't they? Life or death sentences are probably not to difficult to assess since most likely the individual is never getting out of prison. Of course, they may appear in court or in interviews, or there might be other situations in which a free equivalent photo could possibly be created, but those are probably exceptions that can be dealt with on a case-by-case basis. The question is how to handle non-free images of persons sentenced to prison for some period of time but who could possibily be paroled at some earlier date. Do we just deal with these on a case-by-case basis as well? I'm glad Masem brought up the cases of buildings under construction because I was also thinking about that. In such cases, non-free images like design drawings or artist renditions do seem to be allowed until the building has been topped off; at that point, the building has pretty much taken shape and its believed a reasonable free photo of it can be taken. So, in the case of non-free images of persons short-term incarcerated for which new BLPs are created, should a non-free image be allowed from the get go assuming FREER is otherwise met. Is there some sort of unofficial time period that uploaders are expected to wait? Do we ask uploaders to make the same reasonable effort to try and find a free equivalent image as we do for non-free images of recently deceased persons? Is there then some unoffical cutoff date in which such a non-free image no longer becomes acceptable? Is that point when the person actually is released from prison? Is it some other date based upon when the non-free image is uploaded and how much time remains in the subject's sentence? -- Marchjuly (talk) 01:02, 27 January 2023 (UTC)
Non-free images of museum exhibits
I came across File:Martin D-45 81578 (Smiley Maxedon).jpg while checking on some other files and wasn't sure whether its non-free use is justiied in List of original (pre-war) Martin D-45s. Are non-free images of museum exhibits generally allowed? c:COM:CB#Museum and interior photography seems to say that photographs of museum exhibits are acceptable as long as they don't show copyrighted works. I'm not sure, however, whether the design of guitar is eligible for copyright protections or whether it would be considered something that falls under c:COM:CB#Utility objects. In the case of non-free content, it would seem that a freely licensed photograph or even a copyrighted museum exhibit would still be preferred over a non-free image of a copyrighted museum exhibit because the latter adds one more degree of non-freeness to the image. I'm not entirely sure, but I don't think the NFCC generally allows non-free photographs of non-free works to be uploaded, absent any special circumstances (e.g. the work no longer exists and thus a new photo can be taken of it), and it would seem that someone could go to this museum at take a photograph of this guitar (even if it's behind a glass case) as long as it's still on display. There are possibly other issues such as WP:NFLISTS and WP:NFC#CS with this file's non-free use, but I'm more curious about the WP:FREER aspect of the non-free use. -- Marchjuly (talk) 02:10, 26 January 2023 (UTC)
As a general rule, if an underlying 3D work is non-free, then officially we don't have a policy on whether the photograph needs to be freely licensed, since the final output will be non-free regardless. Informally, I think we tend to prefer high-quality official non-free photos over free amateur photos of non-free museum works, but prefer free photos of public outdoor art. In your specific case, IMO "there is no opportunity for the public to photograph the instrument close-up without its display case" is not a valid reason not to take a (slightly worse) freely licensed photo of a utilitarian object. -- King of ♥ ♦ ♣ ♠19:48, 26 January 2023 (UTC)
Thanks for the reply. FWIW, WP:FREER does seem to imply that a free photo of a non-free work is preferred to a non-free photo of a non-free work because the former is considered to be less "non-free". Of course, FREER is more of a guideline than policy, but I've seen NFCC#1 applied that way with respect to images of 3D objects (e.g. sculptures). As for the part about the guitar, you post contained a double neagative so I just want to make sure I understand it correctly. You're stating the since the guitar in that photo is considered to be a utility object, a non-free photograph shouldn't be allowed because someone else could take an equivalent photo (not exactly of the same quality but close enough) and then release that photo under a free license, right? Would the same rationale apply if the guitar was considered to be somehow eligible for copyrigt protection? Would we want, in such a case, a free license for the photo in addition to a non-free license for the guitar? -- Marchjuly (talk) 01:13, 27 January 2023 (UTC)
Correct. A non-free photo is not allowed because someone can take a free equivalent. But if the guitar is copyrighted, then a non-free photo would be allowed. -- King of ♥ ♦ ♣ ♠01:18, 27 January 2023 (UTC)
But we'd want a photo from someone that can say their photograph itself it in the free domain, though as a derivative work, the original copyright remains controlling. A non-free photograph would be subject to the additional copyright term of the photographer.
Of course, we do consider if the museum piece is easily taken as a free image by a visitor. In museums where photography is well known to be off limits (maybe to the specific work or the museum as a whole), we should not expect a free image. Masem (t) 01:30, 27 January 2023 (UTC)
This is called Freedom of Panorama. In Australia, you may freely to take a photograph of a 3D object, like a sculpture, even if the object is copyrighted. This includes objects on display in public interiors. NFCC#1 does not apply. Hawkeye7(discuss)03:10, 27 January 2023 (UTC)
FOP can vary from country to country. For example, there's no automatic FOP under US copyright law for 3D works of art (even publicly displayed ones) per c:COM:FOP United States, and this, I believe, also includes interior photography. There are certain exceptions allowed under US copyright law for such photos when it comes to pre-1978 3D works of art in which {{PD-US-no notice}} or {{PD-US-not renewed}} might apply in some cases; however, even photos in such cases would need to be free since a non-free one most likely wouldn't be accepted per FREER. Anyway, since the museum where this guitar is displayed is located in the US, I'm not sure how Australian FOP and copyright law applies or could be applied to this photo. Moreover, FREER would still be applicable to non-free images of exhibits from museums located in Australia or of 3D works of art located in Australia because, as you point out above, Australia's FOP makes it easy to create a free image of any such work; thus, there's almost zero chance of a non-free one being allowed. -- Marchjuly (talk) 03:59, 27 January 2023 (UTC)
Images
Alright, third luck's the charm. I am wanting to spruce up this article with some images (preferably a photo of foreign monarchs sitting together, a photo of the processional and a photo of the 20+ priests officiating). I understand that you can only upload free content/content that is yours, but the ceremony was private and all images were released by the camera company that given permission to film the ceremony (I am unsure of their name). These images have since been reposted all over the internet and social media. Using WP:NFC, it states that it is acceptable to use non-free content if the image contains "iconic status or historical importance", which I think that these images would. Could someone please respond to me if this is the case and explain/show me how to upload them? Thanks. - Therealscorp1an (talk) 23:47, 17 January 2023 (UTC)
Not necessarily. A single image might be ok, if there is discussion about it in sources. Look around, see what you can find. --Hammersoft (talk) 01:03, 18 January 2023 (UTC)
@Hammersoft: There doesn't seem to be that many from what I can find. There is [this article] which is all about the photos. I'm sure there are few others out there. In the article I have linked, I am hoping to gain the second featured photo, although other photos that have been shared across social media and the internet may be more preferable. - Therealscorp1an (talk) 01:10, 18 January 2023 (UTC)
As Hammersoft points out, an event might be historic but that doesn't make every photograph taken of the event historic. Old photos aren't historic simply because they're old, but rather because somewhere along the way reliable sources have been discussing them or referring to them as historic. So, try to determine whether any of the photos you want to upload for use in the article were themselves the subject of critical commentary in reliable sources at the time or in the years since. It's not typically enough to simply argue that non-free use is justified by saying the photo is rare or otherwise unique in some way or is historic because it has been used by lots of media organizations or seen by lots of people since it was taken, unless those are things that are being covered by reliable sources. The link you provided above is more of a description of photos taken at the event as opposed to critical commentary of the photos taken. In other words it just shows a bunch of photos taken and then adds a caption to them without any real analysis or crtical comentary on the photos. Another problem with the photos in that article is that they're all Getty Images, and the non-free use of Getty images is very hard to justify per WP:NFCC#2, item 8 of WP:NFCI and item 7 of WP:NFC#UUI unless the images themselves are subject to quite a lot of sourced critical commentary. -- Marchjuly (talk) 01:25, 18 January 2023 (UTC)
First, I just want to point out that I understand that you can only upload free content/content that is yours, in your original post is not really correct. Of course, uploading your own original photos is easier since you're almost certainly going to be considered the copyright holder of the photo (WP:Derivative works and c:COM:2D copying can make things more complicated), but it's possible to upload someone else's work if (1) they are the copyright holder and (2) they've either already released their work or can be convinced to release their work under an acceptable free license. For example, some people upload their photos to Flickr, YouTube or some other website, and they specifically make their work available under one of the Creative Commons licenses that are "free enough" for Wikipedia purposes. This might not help you with the funeral photos per se, but it know this may come in handing with respect to something else.As for funeral photos, if you can find any that are not being attirbuted to Getty or a similar company, then it might be possible to use one of them in the main infobox of an article about the funeral. There's no guarantee for sure that will be allowed, but you might be able to establish a consensus in favor of using one for primary identification purposes if you can show by citing sources that photography at the funeral was highly restricted and only pool photos were released. All the images in the article you linked to above being attributed Getty is not a fluke; somebody involved intentionally set things up that way so that they can make money of their photos and felt Getty would be best at helping them do so. So, using a Getty photo or something similar means that the photo itself is going to need to be the subject of sourced critical commentary even if used in the main infobox: not an impossible hurdle but one that's a bit higher that perhaps another photo of the funeral not being monetized by Getty or some other agency. Finally, more than one non-free photo is going to be really hard to justify per non-free content use criterion 3a, but one for the main infobox might be considered OK if you can find a suitable one. -- Marchjuly (talk) 07:30, 19 January 2023 (UTC)
Just because an image is on Getty does not mean that it is not free. Their collection includes PD images, so it may be worth searching for it elsewhere. They have been known to take images off Commons. If they send you a demand for money for your using own image, contact WMF legal. Hawkeye7(discuss)21:08, 19 January 2023 (UTC)
Yes, Getty has been taken to court over copyfraud before; however, I don't think the OP is claiming that they took the funeral photos and that then Getty "took" them from the OP. If that's the case, then depending upon whatever agreement the OP has with Getty, they should be able to upload their photos using the original EXIF data to Commons and release them under a free license if they want. They could also publish them somewhere on their own personal or professional website and release if they want. They might be asked to verify their copyright ownership per C:COM:VRT#Licensing images: when do I contact VRT?, but it could be done. -- Marchjuly (talk) 22:46, 19 January 2023 (UTC)
Hi Therealscorp1an I only clicked on the first photo of the lot and it was licensed as "All right reserved"; so, at least the photo wouldn't be acceptable to upload either to Commons or Wikipedia under a free license. You check the other photos to see whether any of them are licensed under any of the licenses given in c:COM:FLICKR. If you can find one, there's a good possibility would be that it's OK to upload. The only possible problem would be if the Flickr account holder isn't the copyright holder of the photo. If none of the photos are licensed acceptably for Commons or Wikipedia, you could try c:Commons:Flickr files/Appeal for license change since I believe some user have had success with this approach. Perhaps the Flickr account would be willing to release one of their photos under an acceptable free license (even at a lower resolution) so that it could be used. Often photographers take lots of photos of an event like this; some may decide to release the best ones under restrictive licenses and maybe one or two of lower quality ons under a less restrictive license. Maybe this person could be convinced to do that. I don't have a Flickr account, but I think it might be possible to direct message another account holder. -- Marchjuly (talk) 22:47, 28 January 2023 (UTC)
Marchjuly, thanks for your response. Sadly, they are all licensed as "All rights reserved". I don't have a Flickr account either (I'm sure by now you can tell that I am new at all this uploading business), but I do know a Wikipedia user who I think may own one, so I might go ask them. I think I will also go to c:Commons:Flickr files/Appeal for license change as you suggested, although I am not quite sure how to use it. Thank you for the help. Hopefully I can finally get an image for this article or at least just its infobox. - Therealscorp1an (talk) 22:57, 28 January 2023 (UTC)
I'm sorry, but I've never tried that approach before. In the past, some users have mentioned that they've occasionally had success in contact copyright holders via WP:PERMISSION emails and getting them to relicense an existing image or release a new image for Wikipedia purposes, but I don't remember exactly who. I don't use Flickr, but it seems to allow uploaders to choose how they want to license their original content. Many sites don't seem to allow this option and files are all released under a standard license that's too restrictive for Wikipedia's purposes; in such cases, account holders need to add a "written" license so to speak after the fact to the their content if they want to make it available in such a way. Flickr and YouTube seem to have it as part of their upload process. Anyway, this is the "About" page of the Flickr account holder who took those photos and at the very bottom of it is a gmail address. You can try emailing them and explaining what you're trying to do. Perhaps they will respond favorably. -- Marchjuly (talk) 00:51, 30 January 2023 (UTC)
@Marchjuly: He has responded to my email has changed four photos (pretty great ones if you ask me) to Commons Attribution ShareAlike license. This one, this one, this one and this one. Could you please double-check to ensure that these images are now available for use on Wikipedia and would it be alright if you help upload them? - Therealscorp1an (talk) 21:26, 30 January 2023 (UTC)
@Therealscorp1an: That's great news and glad the email you sent paid off. The four files you linked to above seem fine to me, unless Hammersoft or someone else's finds them problematic. You should probably upload them to Commons since it will make them much easier to use. As long as the copyright holder fully understands and agrees to c:COM:CONSENT, c:COM:ENFORCE and c:COM:LRV, there should be no issues moving forward. I should be honest, though, that sometimes copyright holders misunderstand those things and think they're only giving permission for "Wikipedia use only" or "Non-commerical use only"; they subsequently have a change of heart when if they find their work being used in ways they don't like. Such a thing is really more of an exception than the rule, but it does happen. In such cases, the file may be deleted from Commons as "courtesy deletion" if a consensus is established in favor of doing so if a deletion request is made within a short period to time (e.g. a week or two) after the file has been uploaded. Technically, the file is OK to use as licensed the minute it's licensed in such a way, but Commons tries to be a little more understanding about this and accept that mistakes are sometimes made or people change their minds. It's sort of an unofficial cooling off policy. Anyway, since the photographer states they are a photojournalist and since you actually requested they relicense a few photos of their choosing, I'm assuming they understand what a CC license means and chose photos they felt were OK to relicense; so, they should be OK. As long as you didn't make it seem that the photos for going to be "Wikipedia use only" or any "educational use only", they probably can't argue they were deceived in some way. Maybe wait a few days to see whether they change the licensing back? Finally, these are nice photos and should be fine to use; photos, however, are like text in the sense that different Wikipedia users may disagree on their encyclopedic value to the article where they're intended to be used. If that happens and someone removes some or all the photos, don't edit war over the photos; you should instead discuss them on the article's talk page and explain how their use meets WP:IUP#Adding images to articles. Unless your quite sure their removal was clearly a case of vandalism, or they were removed by some random user who didn't leave an policy-based or guideline-based edit summary explaining why, trying to force them into the article repeatedly will be counterproductive. -- Marchjuly (talk) 21:59, 30 January 2023 (UTC)
Just going to add that the photo of the hearse is probably OK to upload asap, but you might want to wait a few days with respect to any photos showing individually identifiable persons. Some countries have strict personality rights laws in addition to their copyright laws, and I don't know if Greece is one of them. According the Commons page I linked to above, you don't need the consent of someone to take their picture and then publish it when they're in a public place under Greek law; however, there appear to be some restriction placed on the commercial reuse of such photos which might become an issue for Commons. I don't know who the women is in the third photo you linked to above, but this could be an issue for that particular photo since it could easily be cropped and used in some other context. The faces of the persons shown in the other photos are either partially hidden or aren't very clear; so, maybe those photos don't need to worry about those kinds of things. -- Marchjuly (talk) 00:25, 31 January 2023 (UTC)
@Marchjuly: I believe that I have gained consent and the photographer understands the photos' use as I piggybacked off the default message in c:Commons:Flickr files/Appeal for license change, which is pretty clear. Also, the woman in the third image is Queen Anne-Marie of Greece, Constantine's now widowed wife. She is a public figure so I assume use of that image is allowed? That's the same for the photo with all the royals standing together on the staircase. Would it be okay if you try uploading the images (just because it is kind of hard for me as a new editor to uploading)? - Therealscorp1an (talk) 05:41, 31 January 2023 (UTC)
@Therealscorp1an: I saw your post but just chose not to reply because I didn't think there was any else I could add to the discussion. I think the relicensed images are probably OK for Commons, but you can ask for other input at c:COM:VPC if you want. You should also be able to upload the images yourself using c:COM:UPLOAD, but you can also ask for help doing that at c:COM:HD. Finally, WP:PING and other types of notifications only work when you ping a user and sign your post in the same edit. They don't work when you try to add a ping template after the fact as explained in WP:PINGFIX. There's also no obligation to respond to a ping or even a post. Notifications are intended to be more of a courtesy that anything else. Some users hate them and actually have set their preferences not to receive them at all. They just respond to queries if and when they want to at their own pace. -- Marchjuly (talk) 05:47, 2 February 2023 (UTC)
@Therealscor1an: I think you mistook my last post as me being angry for some reason. I apologize if what I posted gave you that impression. FWIW, I just don't have the ability to easily download content from Flickr or any other site onto a computer and then reupload that content to Commons. I also think one of the best ways to learn how to do anything on Wikipedia or Commons is simply to learn by doing. As for my comment about pings, I wasn't angry that you tried to ping me. It's just that I didn't feel there was anything more I could add to the discussion. Sometimes others might want to comment in a discussion but may refrain from doing so if they feel it something strictly between two editors. So, maybe taking a pause and waiting to see if anyone else has something to add can be a good idea. -- Marchjuly (talk) 06:52, 2 February 2023 (UTC)
All good. My apologies if I sounded rude as well, I did not mean to come off that way. The photos have now been uploaded. Thank you for your help in my process. - Therealscorp1an (talk) 11:47, 2 February 2023 (UTC)
Non-free coats of arms
I'm pretty sure I asked about this before in general terms, but I'm wondering how the NFCC applies to non-free coats of arms like File:Coat of arms of archbishop Thomas Chung An-zu.png. It would seem that FREER might be an issue when it comes to COAs because the blazon is not eligible for copyright protection and it's only individual representations created based on the blazon which might be copyrightable. So, it would seem that essentially every non-free COA could be considered replaceable non-free use because someone could create their own representation based on the COA's blazon. This file is actually being used twice in the same article which is a problem per WP:NFCC#3a. There also may be a problem per WP:NFCC#4 given the source of the file since that seems to be primarily user-generated content. It's the FREER issue, however, that I'm interested in hearing opinions about. -- Marchjuly (talk) 05:31, 16 February 2023 (UTC)
Non-free photos, WP:MUG and parolees
This is sort of a continuation of the already archived Wikipedia talk:Non-free content/Archive 73#Non-free images of still living persons convicted of a crime yet only incarcerated for a comparatively short period of time and it's related to images like File:Peter braunstein.jpg being used in Peter Braunstein. This file was uploaded in 2005 and it seems to have been used in the main infobox of the article about Braunstein ever since. My question has to do with how the NFCC and maybe even WP:MUG might apply to the file's use if Braunstrein ends up being paroled some time this year. Do we simply stop using the file for FREER reasons? Is it's use going to become a BLP issue per WP:MUG? Do we try to justify the file's non-free use simply because the content of the article is pretty much likely going to remain the same except for perhaps a minor update stating Braunstein has been paroled? I'd image that this type of thing might start becoming an issue moving forward since some incarcerated persons may end up being paroled after some time has passed. -- Marchjuly (talk) 05:59, 16 February 2023 (UTC)
The following discussion is an archived record of a request for comment. Please do not modify it. No further edits should be made to this discussion.A summary of the conclusions reached follows.
There is no consensus to include non-free images in search results. Although there is a bit more support than opposition, I do not see this as enough to find consensus for the implementation. Broadly, the discussion broke along the line of the principal of creating and providing a free encyclopedia for our readers, versus the principal of creating the most informative encyclopedia to our readers. This is a difficult discussion in which to weigh arguments, as the purpose was to change the current practice and policy around NFCC, so policy based arguments themselves are not strong. That said, the slippery slope arguments were not very convincing, nor was the "well, it's not illegal" position, which didn't address the root of the issue at hand. Also, that a cluster of supports were the last contributions to the !vote does not lend their support with more weight. What this comes down to is a disagreement on the basic philosophical underpinning of our work here (free as in free or free as in beer as brought up multiple times in the discussion) and I don't see that a ~55% majority meets the bar to change existing practice and policy. ScottishFinnishRadish (talk) 13:36, 24 February 2023 (UTC)
Wikipedia's on-wiki search tool has introduced small square images to its results (example), but the images do not currently include non-free images. This means that, in the linked example, the Starbucks logo is not used for Starbucks because it is not a free image, and the corporate headquarters photo is used instead. For articles that have no free image in the lead, such as many biographies of deceased individuals, a generic placeholder image is used (example).
In recent discussion, editors found no consensus on the question of whether or not to allow non-free images in search results, with many hesitant because of concern that it might not be valid under fair use rules. After that discussion closed, I reached out to the WMF's legal department, who offered the following:
Hi @Sdkb. Amanda flagged this to me, and I can provide some thoughts and analysis here. While fair use is always a case by case analysis, our opinion on the WMF Legal team is that it is extremely likely that this would be a fair use. If you look at the case of Perfect 10 v. Amazon it has a very similar fact situation (despite Amazon being in the title, it was primarily about Google image search). Going through the fair use factors in brief, using images and image previews for search results is very likely to be considered transformative based on similar case precedent. The nature of the works and the amount used for this feature are likely neutral in the analysis, due to the variety of potential fair use images and the small size they would appear in search results. Lastly, the effect on the market for the work is minimal to zero because it's hard to take small images used in search results and do anything with them, and the images are already available on Wikipedia anyway. That combination of fair use factors leans very strongly in favor of a fair use finding. I hope that's helpful! Jrogers (WMF) (talk) 18:02, 10 January 2023 (UTC)
The non-free content policy currently permits non-free images in article preview popups that appear when readers hover over a link. This discussion seeks to assess community consensus on whether we should similarly permit them for search results. {{u|Sdkb}}talk21:33, 14 January 2023 (UTC)
Support as proposer. Given the necessity of always qualifying any legal statement, the WMF legal team's expert analysis is remarkably clear: This is fair use, so there are no legal issues. That leaves only the question of what approach is best for readers. Being able to use companies' logos, people's portrait photos, and movies' posters to help visually identify them in search results is miles better than a blank placeholder image. Given the clear benefit to readers and lack of any legal obstacle, this is an obvious step for us to take. {{u|Sdkb}}talk21:33, 14 January 2023 (UTC)
Oppose further watering down of the "free encyclopaedia" thing. We do not allow non-free images in lists like discographies. Why should a search for "Queen album" show the album covers while Queen discography does not? Our non-free content criteria should not discriminate against humans. —Kusma (talk) 21:58, 14 January 2023 (UTC)
Note also that trying to be a free encyclopaedia means that we do not accept fair use except in very limited circumstances, making the legal question fairly irrelevant here. —Kusma (talk) 22:01, 14 January 2023 (UTC)
Support As WMF says, this is purely a matter of our own policy and not an legal issue at all. Since allowing images in search results would provide benefit the readers, and not impact the use of the encyclopaedia in any way, we should support it. Hawkeye7(discuss)22:14, 14 January 2023 (UTC)
Oppose It was never a question of being fair use, but meeting the "minimized non-free" part of the mission and which NFC was established. Too many editors think non-free is equivalent to fair use, but they are two very different terms. --Masem (t) 22:41, 14 January 2023 (UTC)
Regarding "mission", the rationale component of NFCC has three components: incentivizing more publication of freely licensed images, minimizing legal exposure, and benefiting readers. The second is moot given WMF Legal's stance and for the third allowing this would clearly be better. For the first, I don't think Starbucks is going to release the rights to its logo just so it can appear in our search results. We already use free images wherever possible, so the cases in which this would apply are the ones where there is simply no free image available, and our choice is either using the fair use image to benefit readers or having nothing.
I'd also add that, if we're considering mission, there is a strong use-it-or-lose-it aspect to fair use case law, as the courts look to precedent among major organizations when making rulings. This particular question may be a settled issue currently, but even so, it's beneficial to the cause of free knowledge to assert our fair use rights more rather than less. {{u|Sdkb}}talk23:26, 14 January 2023 (UTC)
No, it is not "beneficial to the cause of free knowledge" to increase our use of non-free content. Asserting fair use does not make any content free, it only makes it legal to use in specific cases. —Kusma (talk) 23:56, 14 January 2023 (UTC)
Kusma has it exactly right. Every use of non-free increases the burden on end re-users, particularly in countries that do not necessarily enjoy the same type of fair use allowance as the US (like in Germany). We want to encourage editor to avoid nonfree whenever possible, and just because a non-free becomes a nice fair use searching icon doesn't help that goal. Masem (t) 00:52, 15 January 2023 (UTC)
We want to encourage editor to avoid nonfree whenever possible. To use the example in the nomination, what's your preferred freely licensed image for Leonard Pronko? Put simply, what we're talking about here in the vast majority of cases are articles where there is no free image. I too would like to live in the fantasy dream world where every article has a free image, but in the present reality, there are some where a non-free fair use image is the only option. Our non-free image policy currently recognizes that and allows for their use in that situation. All this proposal would do is permit us to extend that use to the search results. {{u|Sdkb}}talk04:27, 15 January 2023 (UTC)
It is false that using a non-free image under a fair use defence is our only option: we can simply use no image at all. (That is what most comparable free encyclopaedias do, like the German or Spanish Wikipedias). —Kusma (talk) 06:59, 15 January 2023 (UTC)
The definition of "free" as meaning "free enterprise" has always been contested. We have always allowed fair use and free images when compatible with our mission. Hawkeye7(discuss)07:45, 15 January 2023 (UTC)
I don't think Wikipedia has ever used "free" as "free enterprise", always as "free content". We have always refused things like allowing people to donate content to Wikipedia, and relied on free content as standard and fair use as an exception (although in the early days some people exploited fair use as far as legally possible, a practice that was ended during the fair use wars of the mid-2000s). —Kusma (talk) 07:53, 15 January 2023 (UTC)
Yup, it is important to stress that the m:Resolution:Licensing policy points specifically to this as the definition of free, which is free as in speech, not free as in beer (which some too often take it to be). Using a minimum amount of non-free images (which are fair use by how the policies are set up) is part of our mission. Masem (t) 14:03, 15 January 2023 (UTC)
Not "free as in free speech". See Wikipedia:The Free Encyclopedia. As Kusma noted, we use "free" to refer to licensing. [7] (free as in free enterprise) This use of "free" goes back to racial slavery in America. Free culture was intended for software, not works like Wikipedia. Free as in free beer has always been an aspect too though. Hawkeye7(discuss)18:03, 15 January 2023 (UTC)
Yes, and we're talking here about articles in which non-free images have been approved per the non-free content policy, which doesn't allow them unless there is no feasible alternative and compelling justification. That minimum use is a given. {{u|Sdkb}}talk17:16, 15 January 2023 (UTC)
What would be the rationale for allowing non-free images in search results but not in lists? They would likely be more relevant for the reader in a list. Not allowing non-free images in search results avoids this particular slippery slope. —Kusma (talk) 17:34, 15 January 2023 (UTC)
Search results and lists are distinct scenarios — the first is a navigational step, whereas the second is a type of content. Whether to allow non-free images in lists is beyond the scope of this discussion. To spell out the reader benefit rationale for search results, images make it significantly easier to parse search results at a glance, which is presumably why the search team added them in the first place (@MPham (WMF) might be able to speak to that further). {{u|Sdkb}}talk17:45, 15 January 2023 (UTC)
There is an obvious navigational use for discographies, and adding album covers to them has the same benefits as adding them to search results. We should not have a "for navigation" non-free content exemption for either of these cases. —Kusma (talk) 18:42, 15 January 2023 (UTC)
Weak oppose. There's no question that there is a valid fair use justification for using the images in search results (see: Google's knowledge box). I believe that fair use images have a good and reasonable place in articles to provide additional context to readers when no other suitable images exist to depict something, but I don't think that the Δvalue for our users is nearly as much when we're talking about search results. — Red-tailed hawk(nest)23:55, 14 January 2023 (UTC)
Support per Sdkb. Small thumbnails in search results are about the least disruptive to our goals of a free encyclopedia as we can get - in fact, if the goal was to ensure maximal freely-usable content, then perhaps only having search thumbnails instead of images in the article would have been less negatively impactful towards that notion. (I support NFC in articles as well). 🐶 EpicPupper(he/him | talk)01:28, 15 January 2023 (UTC)
I opened the previous RFC on behalf of the WMF and I still think this is on the acceptable side of borderline, but a new RFC barely a week after the last one closed is in my opinion asking-WP:OTHERPARENT. I presume the statement from legal is the rationale for this being new circumstances, but it's a flimsy rationale. If we had that legal statement during that RFC the result still would have been majority opposed. Alsee (talk) 03:06, 15 January 2023 (UTC)
Oppose per above. I'm not convinced this is a helpful change. Our stated goal is to create an encyclopedia of free content; using non-free content decoratively does not help advance this goal. -FASTILY03:10, 15 January 2023 (UTC)
Support. Obviously helpful for searchers to find what they're searching for. Free means freedom, and inclusion of the images in search results is no impediment whatsoever to people's freedom to distribute or modify Wikipedia's content. In that respect it is no different from article preview popups. Adumbrativus (talk) 08:05, 15 January 2023 (UTC)
Oppose I closed the most recent RfC, so I won't be closing this one. I agree with Alsee's concern about how rapidly this has followed on the heels of the last RfC. This is wrong. There was never a question of the legality of it under fair use. Wikipedia is an educational resource. As such, it enjoys wide latitude in regards to the use of non-free content. Of course having non-free content in search results is fair use. We already knew that. The question of whether to permit this or not has never been about fair use. If we are to permit non-free images in search results because it's fair use, then we should allow the use of non-free content everywhere on the project and as much as is allowable under fair use law. That, clearly, is not what we do here. We are a free content project. Either we hold to that, or we're done. --Hammersoft (talk) 15:11, 15 January 2023 (UTC)
Additional comment: The proposer of this change suggests that the only obstacles potentially in place are whether it is legal under Fair Use law to allow this, and "leaves only the question of what approach is best for readers". I mean no disrespect to the proposer, but the latter is clearly false. If the only criteria for including non-free content are whether it is (a) legal and (b) useful to readers, then we would not be a free encyclopedia. Under such criteria we would liberally allow the use of non-free content across the entire project. For example, it is inherently very useful for readers if they are able to see the covers of albums in discographies. Yet, we don't allow that. It would also be inherently useful for readers to have images of every character in a fictional universe. Yet, we don't allow that. It would be inherently useful to have galleries of artwork of notable contemporary visual artists. Yet, we don't allow that. While whether something is useful is a criteria for inclusion (WP:NFCC#8), it is NOT the only criteria beyond whether something is legal. It is also quite pertinent to read what else the Foundation has said about this, which brings up Foundation:Resolution:Licensing policy. The use of non-free content must be minimal. There are people commenting here who would appear to want wide inclusion of non-free content because it is useful. With respect, you're missing the point of this project. I don't expect to convince any of you, but rather I hope the divide is made more clear here; there are those who believe in minimal use and those who do not. Understand; the policy outlined by the Foundation "may not be circumvented, eroded, or ignored". Even if we did get consensus to implement this (and it's quite obvious we're not going to at this point), it couldn't be implemented as it violates the Foundation's policy. --Hammersoft (talk) 18:31, 17 January 2023 (UTC)
As do I. Thus, must be minimal. This proposal isn't minimal. It opens the floodgates by allowing non-free content based on the only criteria that it is legal and useful. With that approach, the WP:NFCC policy becomes void. What you are asking for is not possible. Sorry. --Hammersoft (talk) 20:36, 17 January 2023 (UTC)
WP:NFCC#9 has the caveat subject to exemptions, and this discussion is about whether images in search results should be an exemption, so you're just begging the question. Regarding Foundation:Resolution:Licensing policy, it permits projects to define their own exemption doctrine policy (EDP), subject to limitations set forth in clause three, from which you quoted. The full clause is this: Such EDPs must be minimal. Their use, with limited exception, should be to illustrate historically significant events, to include identifying protected works such as logos, or to complement (within narrow limits) articles about copyrighted contemporary works. An EDP may not allow material where we can reasonably expect someone to upload a freely licensed file for the same purpose, such as is the case for almost all portraits of living notable individuals. Any content used under an EDP must be replaced with a freely licensed work whenever one is available which will serve the same educational purpose.
Nothing in this proposal violates that clause. You're welcome to have a very strict interpretation of "minimal," but that's just your personal view and doesn't speak for the resolution or the foundation. {{u|Sdkb}}talk21:14, 17 January 2023 (UTC)
The problem is that everytime we add a carve out exemption, it begs that more exemptions could be added, wracking havoc with NFCC. For example, the use of images in search results can help with navigation for readers, and an exemption may be created. But based on that, some may argue we need similar page use on list and table pages (since images there can help with navigation), and that's a terrible allowance. "For navigation" is not one of reasons that WMF says NFC can be used. Masem (t) 21:26, 17 January 2023 (UTC)
No, but it is definitely a short trip from this proposed exemption to those others. Again, the only reason that has been presented as a benefit is ease of navigation (from search results), and that is a preamble to tons of other exemption about making WP easier to navigate over the free content mission. Masem (t) 21:37, 17 January 2023 (UTC)
Oppose - Utterly ridiculous that this RFC was opened right after the previous RFC was closed. Fair use is not the same as Wikipedia's non-free content policy which is deliberately more restrictive than fair use. I agree with the WMF legal opinion that these images appearing in search results are fair use, but that is irrelevant as those images appearing in the search results is contrary to NFC policy. -- Whpq (talk) 15:21, 15 January 2023 (UTC)
Oppose Nonsensical that this was opened so soon after the previous one. Either we're a free content project, or we're a sort-of-free content project with occasional lapses. As I said previously, "I don't see that this is important or useful enough to make it yet another exception to NFC.". Black Kite (talk)19:12, 15 January 2023 (UTC)
I see it as functionally no different from allowing non-free images on navigational pages like discographies or disambiguation pages, something currently prohibited. —Kusma (talk) 20:17, 15 January 2023 (UTC)
Support - I don't even understand the argument against in this case. Why wouldn't we? We are already using the image on the article, so why wouldn't we also include it in a preview, or hovercard, or search result, etc. etc.? I mean, what is harm in doing that, and what is protected by not doing it? It's certainly not the author's rights, it's not the law, it's not anything in policy... I can't imagine any common sense reasons to not include an image preview just because it's non-free. ¯\_(ツ)_/¯ Whereas, on the other hand, having an image in search results, previews, etc., is helpful, for all the obvious reasons that we include images in our articles. So, on balance, I see a good reason to have images, and no reason not to. I also don't have a problem with this RFC being opened now that WMF Legal has confirmed they don't see a legal issue here. I do agree that they should code some way to tag a particular image in an article as "the preview image" and override the selection of the first image as the preview image. Levivich (talk) 20:08, 15 January 2023 (UTC)
Our NFCC rationales are specific to an article and can even be specific to placement within that article (e.g. "this meets NFCCP#8 because it is in a three-paragraph section that describes..."). The precedent is NFCCP#9, titled "Restrictions on location", where uncontroversially for many years we have been using __NOGALLERY__ on category pages, bots that remove non-free images when someone includes it in a talk page discussion about the image itself, and so on. This is not law, but it is policy that location is a consideration, and this RfC will set policy on this particular location. — Bilorv (talk) 23:37, 21 January 2023 (UTC)
Support, and I hope we can also see this change for the search preview in Minerva Neue – The search tool is not part of the Wikipedia's actual content, so displaying images on it has no effect on that content's freeness. That the images in article preview popups are much higher resolution than in search would suggest that they are at greater risk of breaking fair use, yet we have never had any problems with them.small jarstc22:14, 15 January 2023 (UTC)
Support Fair use is, by definition, fair. Absurd, arbitrary and awkward restrictions on this would therefore be unfair. If an image is permissable in an article then it is obviously permissable in any navigational representation or summary of that article. As an example, consider today's featured article, Shooting of James Ashley. This article's lead image is a fair-use image of the subject. This article is still recognised as being among our finest work and so this usage is both acceptable and admirable. The main page has a blurb which summarises the article but, in the browser view, absurdly does not show the lead image (the apps do show the image). The blurb therefore fails to summarise the article properly in that view and so the main page and its navigational purpose is thereby degraded. This makes no sense and as we have a clear legal ruling saying that such usage is ok, then that's what we should do. Editors who would prefer that fair use content not be used are free to go start such a puritanical project in which it is completely forbidden. Wikipedia is not that project. Andrew🐉(talk) 22:41, 15 January 2023 (UTC)
Oppose - Nothing has changed since the previous RfC that was closed days before this one was opened. Non-free content should be used only when absolutely necessary, and adding them to search results may "look pretty" and may have a minimal effect on identification but are not necessary. That "it (probably) isn't illegal" isn't the bare-minimum standard we should strive for, we need a better justification than that. - Aoidh (talk) 23:36, 15 January 2023 (UTC)
So far, I don't see any justification for why non-free content should be used only when absolutely necessary. I mean, it's never "absolutely necessary", is it, so what kind of standard is that? I'm yearning for an applicable standard for when to use and not use non-free content--if that standard isn't "when it's legal", then what standard is it, and why? Levivich (talk) 02:23, 16 January 2023 (UTC)
WMF's mission is to generate and promote free content, and to that end, while there is recognition that some non-free is necessary to support content, we are to minimize how much we use so that the free content mission is placed at the forefront. Real simple. Masem (t) 02:30, 16 January 2023 (UTC)
How does showing the reader no image in any way support our mission to promote free content? Please explain how using a non-free image in a search result in any way harms our ability to promote free content, or impedes free content from being placed at the forefront, since we only use the non-free image if no free image is available. Levivich (talk) 04:42, 16 January 2023 (UTC)
On the assumption we'd allow non-free in search results, then editors would start trying to tailor images to have the best looking one (not necessarily the free-est) to be used in search results. This completely causes editors to lose the focus of trying to minimize non-free use and deal with free content when possible. Masem (t) 04:59, 16 January 2023 (UTC)
editors would start trying to tailor images to have the best looking one (not necessarily the free-est) to be used in search results – are you suggesting that infobox images should be prioritized based on licensing (e.g. public domain images are preferred over CC BY SA)? 🐶 EpicPupper(he/him | talk)05:46, 16 January 2023 (UTC)
Support no need to be holier than holy here. Having the images as tiny previews in the search results wont harm the mission. Or better yet perhaps; not having them doesn’t do anything to further the mission. —TheDJ (talk • contribs) 20:19, 16 January 2023 (UTC)
Oppose. It's unfortunate that this has to be a one-size-fits-all situation as there are cases where a non-free image in search results has the potential to increase readers' understanding of the article topic, but there are far more cases where this is not the case (for example the Starbucks example mentioned above) and non-free images is an area where we have to be very conservative. Thryduulf (talk) 20:58, 16 January 2023 (UTC)
Mild oppose If only for consistency. Our policies discourage fair use even when it is legal, so legal is not the reason / issue; other objectives such as a free encyclopedia are. North8000 (talk) 21:13, 16 January 2023 (UTC)
My post was sort of a short less clear version of my thoughts. What I meant was that our overall stance (right or wrong, implicit or explicit) is to discourage non-free content) and my thought was to be consistent with that. North8000 (talk) 15:41, 17 January 2023 (UTC)
Oppose The line in the sand that is our current EDP already concedes far too much. Persistently attempting to chip away at the foundational principle of free content is short-sighted and unacceptable. We should be working to the eventual elimination of the EDP not adding more exceptions. CIreland (talk) 21:16, 16 January 2023 (UTC)
Oppose our policies are pretty clear that we go beyond legality in the efforts to generate more free content. Endless exceptions like this have the culminating effect of eroding that for little benefit. Der Wohltemperierte Fuchstalk23:26, 16 January 2023 (UTC)
How, specifically, would this in any way erode efforts to generate more free content? Those of us supporting have repeatedly asked that question. Kusma's highly implausible response here has so far been the only answer. If the opposition boils down to just a general dislike of fair use content, even when every reason we normally limit it does not apply here, that is not going to be persuasive — either to the broader editorship now starting to show up here or to a closer. {{u|Sdkb}}talk19:55, 17 January 2023 (UTC)
The thought should be flipped around; it isn't dislike of fair use content, it's love of free culture. If your criteria is whether it erodes efforts to generate more free content or not, then we should include album covers in discographies, artwork in galleries, character images in character lists, and etc. etc. etc. There's no way to replace those with free content, so including them doesn't erode the ability to replace them. So, we should allow them, right? Except, we don't. There's really no way to convince either side in this debate. Either you embrace free culture, or you don't. Not embracing it doesn't make you a criminal here of course. It just places you in opposition to WP:NFCC and Foundation:Resolution:Licensing policy. The overarching question isn't whether we allow non-free images in search results (that clearly violates standing policy at WP:NFCC#9) . The question is whether we overturn WP:NFCC policy. Since that clearly violates Foundation:Resolution:Licensing policy, that isn't going to happen. --Hammersoft (talk) 20:47, 17 January 2023 (UTC)
Yes, it is the love of free culture. Free culture is about making things affordable and available. And we don't. Our policy is to make thing unaffordable and unavailable, and to prioritise the rights of corporations to profit over providing access to information. No violation of NFCC#9 is proposed, as it exempts "uses [that] are necessary for creating or managing the encyclopedia" Hawkeye7(discuss)21:21, 17 January 2023 (UTC)
Support because the mission is to get information to readers, and if sticking a tiny square of album art in the search results helps people find the right page, then that's what we should do. As a tangent: It is ridiculous to even suggest that because WP:NFEXMP (which this community wrote) doesn't explicitly contain an exemption for this use, that we are not allowed to create in such an exemption via this RFC (exactly like we wrote all of the other exemptions in the policy). Please, don't write about how this would "violate" the current version of a policy. Write about what you want the policy to say in the future. If your view is that it's better for people to have to load two or three pages to find the they're looking for, instead of having an image there to guide them to the right page, then just say that. And if your POV is that the WMF's policy would prohibit this, then I point out that the WMF created the software feature that displays this, and it went through Legal review. If Legal thought this violated their policy on minimal use of copyrighted content, the product manager would not have been allowed to create the feature in the first place. WhatamIdoing (talk) 22:21, 17 January 2023 (UTC)
That presumes that legal talked with the trustees. The WMF is structurally incompetent, as has been demonstrated many times. I don't think that is a safe presumption to make. And, again, it being legal isn't the criteria we're discussing. Of course it's legal; we're an educational resource that enjoys very wide latitude under law in the employment of non-free content. --Hammersoft (talk) 22:36, 17 January 2023 (UTC)
I see people above talking about whether a resolution adopted the the WMF's board prevents us from using a software feature created by the WMF. If the WMF believed that this action would violate the WMF's own policy, the WMF would not allow this software feature to be used on any WMF-hosted wiki. In such a case, this discussion would be pointless. If you think they're wrong, I suppose you could contact the Board yourself. WhatamIdoing (talk) 02:57, 18 January 2023 (UTC)
That's not quite right. The WMF implemented this ability to have images alongside search results, without regards to free or non-free content. When en.wiki pointed out the problem, they modified the code so that non-free images would not appear in search results, at least for en.wiki (have not tried other wikis). So they understand the concern, and while they have affirmed there is clearly no legal issues, its still up to us how to do non-free exception policy. Masem (t) 03:30, 18 January 2023 (UTC)
Support The images are closely connected to the article and it is entirely reasonable to include a previous image along with the text snippet in the results to aid in navigating articles. Presence of these images in search, which is not merely decorative, in no way diminishes Wikipedia's provisioning of free content and does not violate the standards for fair use. Reywas92Talk03:44, 18 January 2023 (UTC)
Support I don't particularly care for others feelings on the intent behind NFC. What I do know is that when searching for movies and tv shows, it is rare to find an article with an image since most use non-free posters in the infobox. This is just a worse user experice ever since they disabled NFC in search and I think that user experice should come first over nostalgia about intent behind the policy (Since the oposers also admit their arguments are not legally based) which was created ~15 years ago and such a usecase was probably not envisioned at the time. Terasail[✉️]07:08, 19 January 2023 (UTC)
Nostalgia? The entire purpose of the project is what's behind it. It's the functional underpinnings and our raison d'etre. --Hammersoft (talk) 15:16, 19 January 2023 (UTC)
Last I checked, the purpose of the project is neatly summed up in WP:5P1: Wikipedia is an encyclopedia. We're talking about a step that'll make us a better encyclopedia by helping readers parse search results more easily. Even WP:5P3 (the pillar on free content) notes that Borrowing non-free media is sometimes allowed as fair use. It is indeed a nostalgic fantasy to think that we could ban all non-free content (as some here have suggested) and still give readers high-quality visual information on all topics. A world in which editors can find freely licensed company logos and movie posters if only they're just incentivized to dig a little harder is not the world we live in. That's why the topics we're currently discussing are allowed to have fair use images under NFCC#1. You can bemoan the presence of those images, but blocking ourselves from making full use of them won't do anything whatsoever to change how many free ones are available. {{u|Sdkb}}talk20:02, 19 January 2023 (UTC)
5P is not policy, its a wishlist. On the other hand, the WMF's mission and resolution are binding for all we do. And the fact that there are versions of Wikipedia is German and Spanish that don't use any nonfree shows its possible to make a mission-compliant encyclopedia. Our goal is to promote free content, and thus minimize frivolous use of non-free. Masem (t) 20:08, 19 January 2023 (UTC)
How am I misunderstanding. Most non free content is used to identify the article. What is the point of using images to identify the article if you can't identify the article with images through search??? Terasail[✉️]20:08, 19 January 2023 (UTC)
The only help images in search will be will be for ones already familiar with a topic and are trying to differentiate on a recognizable image. A user search on s topic they have no idea about won't be helped by images, but by the text we provide. Masem (t) 20:10, 19 January 2023 (UTC)
Lets say someone watches a movie / tv series episode and wants more information on it. The image would proably help since they just spent 40/90 mins watching the thing they would probably recognize a poster of it. Terasail[✉️]20:48, 19 January 2023 (UTC)
Assumption they search on the film's name and even on a close match, the text part of the results will should the topic type which is far simpler and free to use to help distinguish topics. The image could be helpful but far from essential for this purpse. Masem (t) 00:39, 20 January 2023 (UTC)
Those who wish to return to more "fair use" instead of restricted non-free content are the nostalgic ones: 16 years ago Queen discography looked like this. List of Buffy the Vampire Slayer episodes had non-free images for every episode (all deleted now). When the policy was tightened to go for minimal use of non-free content, it was deliberately decided to stop including images "for identification" in lists and other navigational pages. We currently have the compromise where you can hover in such a list if you need an image for identification. Search is just as navigational as such lists are, yet we would certainly violate the spirit and the letter of "minimal" if we went back to including dozens and dozens of non-free images on episode lists again. —Kusma (talk) 22:45, 19 January 2023 (UTC)
Oppose. The search results page feels just as frontend-y as the article namespace, it just doesn't seem right to have an exception for it. Brightgalrs (/braɪtˈɡæl.ərˌɛs/)[ᴛ]09:35, 19 January 2023 (UTC)
Oppose This was advertised to me as a vegan dinner. We can, in fact, make a high quality encyclopedia with free images, but unfortunately it takes some work. For example, an editor got Art Lien one of the only remaining Supreme Court sketch artists, whose sketches are syndicated to CBS, NBC, the New York Times, and other organizations, to release two of his professional-quality sketches under Creative Commons licenses (one, two). We have a whole how-to guide on asking for image licenses with example email templates. The benefit of this approach (as opposed to weakening the NFCC as proposed) is that it improves the commons for everyone. Those images from Art Lien are the only freely licensed images depicting the US Supreme Court during oral arguments and they are available to anyone, for any purpose, in perpetuity. Sure, we could have used them under fair use or something, but that's short-sighted and trades great societal benefit for expediency. Weakening the NFCC is not the only way to improve the encyclopedia for readers, and I'm suspicious of any solution that suggests it is. High-quality vegan dinners exist, and while it may be more expedient to use animal products, that defeats the whole point of a vegan dinner. The same for "The Free Encyclopedia". Sure, it would be really expedient to use tons of fair use content, but that defeats the whole point of a free encyclopedia. It's not just about writing articles, it's about the impact we have on the wider commons of free knowledge, and I'm deeply suspicious of any attempts to undermine that. — Wug·a·po·des21:34, 19 January 2023 (UTC)
There is no point to a vegan dinner; it is just another WP:FRINGE ideology. Your argument is circular; you are using the policy to justify itself. Restricting fair use trades societal benefit for corporate profit. Hawkeye7(discuss)21:52, 19 January 2023 (UTC)
I don't think it's reasonable to call something "fringe" when the logo of this website advertises it prominently and our entire legal licensing structure is organized around it. In my example, a professional artist who sells his work for his living released it for free to everyone. How on earth is that trading corporate profit for societal benefit? Mind boggling. If you want to write a non-free encyclopedia, there are tons of places to do that, but this one is advertised as "the free encyclopedia" so I think it's understandable that people who came here for that purpose would oppose having the rug pulled out from under us or treated as if we're crazy for believing the literal text of the 16-year-old mission statement. — Wug·a·po·des23:09, 19 January 2023 (UTC)
I mentioned much further above that there is a divide between those who believe in minimal use and those who do not. In essence, it's those who believe in the mission and those who don't. Not believing in the mission doesn't make someone a pariah here. But, it does generate difficulties when applying policy. From years of experience, I can tell you that it is exceptionally rare to find someone whose opinion on either side of the divide changes to the other side. I've seen it happen just once and that was years ago. Once. It is highly unlikely anyone is going to be convinced either way by this RfC. --Hammersoft (talk) 01:52, 20 January 2023 (UTC)
Only if you presuppose that it's "free" as in "liberty" and not as in "beer", and that's the mission statement of the WMF, not Wikipedia, which has WP:5P and that thing Jimbo wrote that I forget the link to. I take as much umbrage under basics like the logo and the tagline, but I focus on a different word: instead of "free", it's "encyclopedia". I'm here to write an encyclopedia and a good encyclopedia is illustrated, with good pictures. I want the encyclopedia to be free, as in beer, free to read, and sure free to reuse would be great, but not at the cost of compromising the quality of the encyclopedia. Good pictures are better than free pictures. And that's what the mission is about, at least for me. I don't care what the heck the WMF's mission is. Levivich (talk) 03:07, 20 January 2023 (UTC)
The free content mission is a function of all sites run by the WMF. Just because this is an encyclopedia doesn't mean we have a special means to exempt ourselves from that overall mission from the family of WMF sites. Free content for reuse and distribution is a higher priority to the WMF than being pretty. You must operate under this mission, because there's no other one, certainly not your interpretation of it. Masem (t) 05:29, 20 January 2023 (UTC)
Nothing in this proposal hinders that in any way. The fair use images are already present in the articles. The proposal only allows them to be displayed on search results, which are ephemeral. Hawkeye7(discuss)05:48, 20 January 2023 (UTC)
Better start a thread at ANI, I've been refusing to operate under this mission for years. :-D It's not about being pretty, it's about being educational. Pictures are educational, as are video and audio. We don't have a color image of Frank Sinatra because editors think a black and white free image is better than a color non-free one. That's a mistake in a biography about someone known as "Old Blue Eyes", and an example of how the free-as-in-libre mission of the WMF impedes the more valuable mission of providing free-as-in-beer education. I'm not here to participate in a free knowledge movement, I'm here to write an encyclopedia, and the only reason I'm here to write an encyclopedia and not elsewhere is because this is The Encyclopedia. If another website was the world's go-to crowdsourced knowledge website, I'd be there instead of here. I don't care who runs it or what their mission is, I care that it's read by millions. That's why I'm here: because the reader is here, and I want to help collect, store, and share the world's knowledge. I don't care whether the content is free to reuse because existing copyright law already allows fair use; free reuse is not really significant to distribution of the knowledge, and if anything, I'd rather have the reader reading from the central database (Wikipedia) than a republication (a mirror site or book that reused the content). I went to a bookstore and saw a book on the shelf that was just a collection of Wikipedia articles printed out and on sale for $25. What a rip off. That's what our free-to-reuse license gets us. I don't support it, and I don't have to support it, or operate under it, but none of that matters, because supporting the use of fair use images in search results furthers the WMF's mission, as well as my own. Levivich (talk) 05:49, 20 January 2023 (UTC)
I think a quote from this blog post is quite relevant here; standing in the road to be a roadblock against the forces of [non-free content] does nothing when those forces can just drive around you. An "all or nothing" approach to free licensing just doesn't work in today's information ecosystem. 🐶 EpicPupper(he/him | talk)06:01, 20 January 2023 (UTC)
Your assertion is wrong and easily disproved. The experiment has been made, and despite not having fair use, the German Wikipedia is the largest and most popular encyclopedia in German. And the French Wikipedia in French. —Kusma (talk) 06:26, 20 January 2023 (UTC)
Support per Reywas. Helpful for readers; this won't make anyone stop pushing for freely-licensed alternatives where we currently have only fair use images. – SJ +23:38, 19 January 2023 (UTC)
Oppose - the legal issue is irrelevant - the issue is the ethics of expanding our theft of other entities' commercial opportunities and property, all while dancing under a banner reading "The Free Encyclopedia". Because ... our mission is more important? And probably nobody's going to stop us? That's what's good enough? Our history books are filled with epithets for people whose mission was "more important" or "more glorious" (or whatever) than the people they stole from, and the museums which still display their stolen "treasures". I don't want Wikipedia to go further down that road. Ivanvector (Talk/Edits) 15:34, 20 January 2023 (UTC)
@Ivanvector, could you expand on what commercial opportunities are being lost by using fair use images that are included in articles (and thus have passed WP:NFCCP#2) in search results? Which photographer is going to lose out on sales if this proposal passes? From my vantage point, your !vote exemplifies the line of opposition thinking that goes "I don't like fair use, therefore oppose," without any consideration of whether or not the reasons we restrict it apply here. {{u|Sdkb}}talk22:01, 20 January 2023 (UTC)
Copyright holders have an inherent right to say how their works are used, including the right to charge a reasonable fee to license their works. Wikipedia completely ignores that: rather than approach any rightsholder to negotiate a license for their works which would be compatible with our own license, we've just declared that our use of the copyrighted work is educational and thus qualifies for fair use or fair dealing. We then solicit donations based on the quality of our encyclopedic content which includes these copyrighted works for which we have no license, meaning we are using those unlicensed works to generate revenue (a lot of revenue) for a private entity while providing no opportunity for the rightsholders to be compensated. And in the process we create a downstream licensing issue for anyone wishing to reuse Wikipedia's content, which directly hinders our mission to be the "Free Encyclopedia".
I know there is a doctrine of fair use or fair dealing in many of the countries in which Wikipedia operates, and WMF Legal's opinion is that we're basically in the clear in the United States, but legal =/ ethical. If you want me to say "this is fair use so oppose" then yes, that's what I'm saying; from my vantage point, we're saying to the rightful owners of content we use without their permission, "we have altered the arrangement, pray we don't alter it further." Just because we've succumbed once to the unethical use of copyright-protected content doesn't in and of itself justify further exploiting that content, nor does it in and of itself invalidate objections to broadening its use.
To put the argument back onto policy: using non-free content in search results fails WP:NFCC#8 (contextual significance) since a tiny reduced-resolution thumbnail image next to a textual search result does not significantly (as the policy says) add to a reader's understanding of the topic, nor would its omission be detrimental since we're already not doing it; and this fails WP:NFCC#9 as search results are not articles - we don't even allow non-free content on disambiguation pages, and only links to non-free content are allowed if discussing it on a talk page. Ivanvector (Talk/Edits) 15:58, 21 January 2023 (UTC)
Support. This isn't chipping away at being a free encyclopedia at all. We're already hosting the image - having it also show up in search results doesn't meaningfully change the "amount" of non-free content used. If we collectively decide to push the pendulum further toward "free", fine, but that would take the form of more restrictive NFCC rules for what images can be uploaded at all, IMO. If we've decided it's relevant, then that bridge has been crossed already. Take famous examples like Flower Power (photograph) - if we've decided to use fair use to host the picture, are we really using "more" fair use to verify that yes, we've hosted the picture? No, IMO. SnowFire (talk) 22:22, 20 January 2023 (UTC)
Support of course, we can be a free-content encyclopedia while affording ourselves the legal right to fair-use of copyrighted imagery. It's absolute lunacy to think the two are mutually exclusive. —Locke Cole • t • c16:16, 21 January 2023 (UTC)
They are mutually exclusive. Its why NFC policy is purposely stricter than what fair use would allow. There are numerous different questions editors should be asking themselves when they bring in a non-free image to use on a free content encyclopedia, compared to when one considers whether the image use would satisfy a fair use defense. Masem (t) 16:35, 21 January 2023 (UTC)
I'll tell you what: anyone thinking they can make a "complete" encyclopedia without non-free content is someone not making a "complete" encyclopedia. It is simply physically impossible, and always will be, to have an encyclopedia that covers topics far and wide without including some non-free content. Deliberately limiting ourselves because of some pie-in-the-sky fantasy of having a 100% free encyclopedia runs straight up against the reality that such an encyclopedia would be missing huge swaths of knowledge readers may wish to know about. They are not mutually exclusive, and protests to the contrary are ridiculous. —Locke Cole • t • c16:51, 21 January 2023 (UTC)
I looked at the mission. I didn't see the part where non-free was somehow against the mission. The content we provide is free. That it utilizes legal non-free content is, as stated repeatedly, not somehow mutually exclusive to the goal. I'm sure there's some other project you can find that more aligns with your unrealistic goals though. Have fun finding it. —Locke Cole • t • c06:09, 22 January 2023 (UTC)
I've noted above about the divide between people who believe in the mission and people who don't. It's clear you don't get the mission. That's not because you lack the means to do so, but because you don't want to get it. That's why you support this RfC. That's why no amount of writing will convince you otherwise. We can go back and forth a few hundred times if you like, but it won't get us anywhere. My point above was to highlight the divide. This exchange between us shows that rather clearly. --Hammersoft (talk) 15:04, 22 January 2023 (UTC)
It's clear you don't get the mission. It's clear you're just here to be a dick. It's entirely possible for two reasonable people to disagree. But instead you're inviting me to leave to a different project (see the Fandom dig above), and stating that after 18 years of being here I don't get the mission. I get it. We just disagree on the way to get there. You want to be a strict fundamentalist. I want to do the work we can today so that generations later we aren't having people trying to find art/photos/works that may no longer be available from other sources because of their age. But I guess this is the "ridiculous" part of what I alluded to earlier. My support stands, you may continue to be ridiculous. I will not engage you further. —Locke Cole • t • c17:53, 22 January 2023 (UTC)
The German and Spanish ones appear to be doing just fine without non-free.
For our purpose, I would estimate 90% of non-free belong in the simple "identification" category: images of persons, photographs of modern art, logos of companies, covers of books, films, etc. with the image itself rarely discussed within the article. We allow these cases but understand that because we have a standalone article about X, and there's no free image equivalent (as would be the case of a living person), then a non-free image to accompany the article is reasonable, but it is absolutely not required.
The only time that non-free is essential is when the image itself is the subject of discussion of the article. For example, the amount of discussion on the Mona Lisa page about the work itself (brush strokes, etc.) would be the type to absolutely justify a non-free image of the Mona Lisa, were it a non-free image. And those cases are extremely limited. And if we were like the German or Spanish wikis, we'd make sure links to sites that have the image would be highlighted to make it easy to find for readers. Masem (t) 20:32, 21 January 2023 (UTC)
Support. Per the RFC opening statement, WMF Legal seems fine with it, and in my opinion more/better images in search results would provide a better experience for our readers. It also doesn't change the fair use criterianon-free content criteria (i.e. it doesn't loosen it, it won't lead to a mass upload of additional non-free content), so overall seems low impact. –Novem Linguae (talk) 03:19, 22 January 2023 (UTC)
There is no such thing as a "fair use criteria", it is called non-free for a very specific reason, and for that reason, the question asked of WMF legal has no bearing on the actual issue at hand. Masem (t) 03:42, 22 January 2023 (UTC)
Yes, because the question asked if it the images would meet fair use, which is not the same as if they would meet the non-free criteria for en.wiki, which is what is being asked in this RFC. Masem (t) 03:56, 22 January 2023 (UTC)
The question asked is if they should meet our non-free criteria, not if they do meet the existing criteria, which is a local en-WP policy that the community wrote and the community can modify. WhatamIdoing already articulated this perfectly well in their !vote. {{u|Sdkb}}talk15:35, 22 January 2023 (UTC)
The response from the WMF was regarding the legal implications of the use under fair use law. It did not address the non-free content criteria. If you want to get an answer to the question of whether we could do this or not with regards to the NFCC, then you're going to have to ask the WMF Trustees. They are the ones who put in place Foundation:Resolution:Licensing policy. That policy states it "may not be circumvented, eroded, or ignored by Wikimedia Foundation officers or staff nor local policies of any Wikimedia project". Adding this exception would be eroding that policy. Can you change the local EDP policy? Yes. However, doing so in such a way that it erodes the Foundation's policy isn't going to happen. --Hammersoft (talk) 16:15, 22 January 2023 (UTC)
The question asked specifically was "editors were wondering whether using fair use images in search results would be acceptable use. I was wondering if you or someone else in your department might be able to let us know what WMF Legal's stance on that would be." Not one mention about meeting the non-free criteria. Again, I have to stress that there is a major distinction between non-free and fair use that was not asked yet. Masem (t) 16:39, 22 January 2023 (UTC)
Support as enhancing readers' experience and not violating any existing policy. The whole point of the "freedom" of our content is to allow it to be broadly disseminated under permissible free-of-charge licenses, not to satisfy some ideological purity. Tiny thumbnails that readers see in the search results are not even disseminable, so it seems that we're reducing user experience for basically no purpose. No such user (talk) 13:41, 25 January 2023 (UTC)
Oppose Non-free is non-free, don't change the concept please. Why do we need to add another unnecessary exception exactly? I'm afraid, what would the next proposal will seek to make free? --Mhhosseintalk11:23, 26 January 2023 (UTC)
Support WMF is good with it and it improves the experience of our users. Seems really easy. I'm a big (big) fan of "Free as in Freedom" for nearly everything. But I fail to see how fair use in this context hurts anything. Hobit (talk) 18:06, 27 January 2023 (UTC)
Support Showing non-free thumbnails in search results is a pragmatic improvement. It will allow readers to identify articles more quickly when searching by improving identification of article subjects. The non-free content we have will be used slightly more, but it won't mean more non-free files. Building an encyclopedia requires some non-free content, and quickly identifying articles as an important feature of an online one. The additional use of non-free content is small relative to the utility gained. — Preceding unsigned comment added by The Quirky Kitty (talk • contribs)
Oppose I didn't participate in the previous discussion and frankly I'm surprised the possibility it might not be fair use was even considered, it seemed fairly unlikely and while we should still have checked with the WMF just in case it should never have been a major consideration. We intentionally greatly limit the application of fair use way more than we need to for legal compliance because of our goal to be a free encyclopaedia, one of the reasons it's NFCC rather than mentioning fair use nowadays. And this is one of those cases where I feel it's a step too far. Nil Einne (talk) 15:10, 28 January 2023 (UTC)
Support We are building a free encyclopedia, and the thing about encyclopedias is they are meant to be read. Images can be a key navigational tool, and it seems silly to bar whole swathes of articles using them in search results when the WMF says it's a legal non-problem. They're not merely decorative; they help readers get to the knowledge they want quickly and easily. If an image says a thousand words, that's a hell of a lot less scrolling through disambiguation pages, even more so for the significant portion of readers who may have a limited English ability. As for the last discussion, the legal position of the WMF is very relevant, which is illustrated by this one generating a more substantive debate. --Voellotalk10:12, 31 January 2023 (UTC)
As has been stated repeatedly, the WMF's position on this from a legal perspective is irrelevant. As an educational resource, this project has very wide latitude on the use of copyrighted works. The WMF hasn't stated a position on this vis-a-vis Foundation:Resolution:Licensing policy. That is the important point, not whether it's legal or not. We already knew it was legal even before this RfC started. Further, the argument that allowing this makes things easier has no weight. If that were the deciding factor, then we might as well delete WP:NFCC. --Hammersoft (talk) 13:34, 31 January 2023 (UTC)
The WMF stating its exact position for every plausible feature that could arise nearly two decades after a policy is written wasn't and isn't feasible. It was always meant to be interpreted in good faith. While we may disagree on what constitutes "illustrat[ing]" or "identifying" works, it is my position that this proposed feature would be minimal. It is not fundamentally different from allowing non-free images in hovercards, as they both utilise images already available on Wikipedia (alongside article text) to act as a gateway to draw users to the specific article for which they were designated. As for "we already knew it was legal", that is simply not the case in the original RfC, as some users explicitly expressed doubts that the WMF legal team would allow it. Which I am sure you were aware of as you closed the discussion. As for my argument that we should improve Wikipedia somewhat, we should. --Voellotalk15:56, 31 January 2023 (UTC)
And as I've stated before, I believe this harms the project. The line I highlighted before remains; there are those who believe in our mission and those who do not. --Hammersoft (talk) 16:44, 31 January 2023 (UTC)
You believe I was WP:INVOLVED in closing this, and this somehow tainted the results? Do I have this right? You believe there was consensus in that discussion? I explained the close here. If you think I was out of line, then you are quite welcome to report me for violating WP:ADMINCOND and WP:INVOLVED. You might try WP:XRV or, alternatively, WP:AN. I welcome your input there. --Hammersoft (talk) 18:59, 31 January 2023 (UTC)
I don't have any opinion on the results of the close, but I don't think it is best practice for it to be done by someone with clearly strongly held opinions on the topic. --Voellotalk19:28, 31 January 2023 (UTC)
It's clearly a poor look for you to close that discussion and then !vote in this one, Hammersoft. If you disagree about that, then there's a difference in understanding of WP:INVOLVED and it might be good to raise at WP:XRV the question of whether you should have !voted here. Regarding the prior close, that's settled past and thus not worth rehashing. {{u|Sdkb}}talk19:35, 31 January 2023 (UTC)
I don't see the issue. As I explained on my talk page, it was blatantly clear there was no consensus in favor of the change. I don't see how any other administrator would have concluded there was consensus in favor. The discussion was clearly against it. Regardless, further discussion here is outside of the scope of this discussion. Feel free to raise it at XRV or wherever you feel appropriate. --Hammersoft (talk) 19:45, 31 January 2023 (UTC)
Oppose I've read many of the arguments in this discussion both ways, and while I think both sides have cogent points, I think I come off slightly more in the oppose camp. Ultimately, the use is decorative; images in search results aren't strictly necessary, just nice, and I can't see that as a valid exception to the long-established local NFCC policies we have here at en.wikipedia. The "fair use" argument is a non-starter for me, as the NFCC policy is ultimately independent of any fair use concerns, it is deliberately more restrictive, and I can't see how this proposal jives with NFCC 9; if it is shown with every search result, that's not on the article page. If we need to modify or eliminate NFCC 9 then we maybe need to have that discussion, but as it stands now, it's a criteria, it's plainly applicable here, and this proposal violates it. --Jayron3216:22, 2 February 2023 (UTC)
Yes, I had already looked at those exemptions. I don't feel like this qualifies under any of the exemptions already so listed. --Jayron3219:29, 2 February 2023 (UTC)
Support, the thumbnails are too low resolution to be identifiable and commercially viable. I do think offensive content should not be easily visible in search results since those can shock the reader when they do not want to see it, but that is a different topic. Aasim - Herrscher of Wikis ❄️ 23:13, 2 February 2023 (UTC)
Oppose. Whether or not our use of the images would qualify as fair use is an irrelevant question—we would never use an image which does not qualify as fair use, since that would be literally illegal. We deliberately restrict the use of nonfree media much more than the law requires us to. Every use of nonfree content damages our mission to be a free content project and should be weighted against that. I see no good case here that the damage to our mission in further use of nonfree content is outweighed by what would be a pretty small benefit; that's essentially decorative use and we prohibit that for good reason. SeraphimbladeTalk to me23:59, 4 February 2023 (UTC)
Support - the image at the article name should be one which will indicate to the reader that he/she found the correct article. A fair use logo is frequently the best method to do this. And the fair use rules certainly apply to actual current-version wiki pages, I've seen no evidence that we will delete old revisions of articles because of non-NFCC compliance. Animal lover|666|18:24, 5 February 2023 (UTC)
Support Images in search are so small that I don't think it's fair to apply the NFCC policy on them. Ultimately they are useful for easily identifying the relevant article. – SD0001 (talk) 19:36, 6 February 2023 (UTC)
Small thumbnails may support fair use defense better, but they are still covered by NFCC regardless the resolution. Also images are only useful to assure you have the right article if you are familiar with the topic, not if you are looking for the topic the first time (what search us built around) Masem (t) 21:46, 6 February 2023 (UTC)
Support If we're already using the image in an article and hovercards, I don't see it as a further use to display it in searches for the related article. If we're restricting ourselves to free images only, then we shouldn't be using non-free images at all, but clearly this isn't the case and having the image displayed in searches isn't a step further legally or philosophically. Use the image or don't, but don't pick and choose. HerrWaus (talk) 20:23, 6 February 2023 (UTC)
Support since having images can help readers navigate to the correct page. For instance, if two similarly-titled pages come up seeing a picture might be useful, or if a reader searches with something based on an ambiguous title (for instance, Afghan Girl isn't at all obvious from the title if you don't know what it is already). And the treatment of "free" as some quasi-religious altar to genuflect before is just really... bizarre. There are a lot of comments here that come off as the clergy of some sect lecturing the rest of us, as if NFCC was somehow an untouchable text handed down from above; I'm not impressed with people who are treating it like the founding document of a cult, it's a policy for building an encyclopedia. The "encyclopedia" part, about informing our readers, is the primary goal of Wikipedia, and depriving ourselves of tools to inform readers—that is, the ones who it's supposed to be serving, contrary to some attitudes on display here its primary goal isn't to satisfy people who have very idiosyncratic obsessions over internal policies—is actively detrimental. If there's no legal reason to not do it, and it can benefit our readers, that's deliberately degrading the quality of the encyclopedia for absolutely no benefit; Wikipedia isn't just a collection of free content, it's content with the goal of having a usable encyclopedia. The Blade of the Northern Lights (話して下さい) 21:22, 7 February 2023 (UTC)
Support – Previews without an image look odd. Preview images provide visual identification and are of low resolution and thus satisfy NFCC, and is Fair Use per the proposal. However, a system that makes the preview image the first free-use image in the article would also be fine. What I don't understand is how making non-free images already set as the lead image in an article being used in search results to represent the article in which they are the lead image hinders the goal of being a "free encyclopedia". DecafPotato (talk) 23:45, 7 February 2023 (UTC)
Support, based on reasons given by No such user and The Blade of the Northern Lights. I can appreciate the position taken by many of the people opining in the opposition, but ultimately I find myself aligning particularly with No such user's interpretation: [the] whole point of the "freedom" of our content is to allow it to be broadly disseminated under permissible free-of-charge licenses, not to satisfy some ideological purity. Where we already host these non-free images for the purposes of subject identification and recognition in articles, using them – essentially as icons – to support those same purposes as part of the reader's navigation to the relevant articles strikes me as reasonable, and not incompatible with the existing NFCCs. XAM2175(T)12:55, 8 February 2023 (UTC)
Support. The WMF lawyer's advice is clear - we are allowed to include thumbnails of those images in search results. Not doing so is harmful to readers and deterimental to the project. Therefore, we should do so. Paranoia about free content is unhelpful - Wikipedia is an encyclopaedia, not a repository of free-use images (that's Commons). Modest Geniustalk13:02, 10 February 2023 (UTC)
That is not at all what the lawyer said. The statement is that the use of such images would qualify as fair use under US law. That was never really in doubt. As pointed out repeatedly in this discussion, we follow a stricter policy of non-free content. If all you are concerned about is legality, then there is no need for any non-free content policy and just rely in fair use. But we deliberately don't. -- Whpq (talk) 13:42, 10 February 2023 (UTC)
We are discussing whether the policy should allow this, so pointing at the current version of the policy is moot. The lawyer does say there is no legal impedement to showing thumbnails in search results, so we are allowed to do so if the community decides it. The issue then comes down to a choice between a) improving the utiity of the enclycopaedia to users vs b) taking a very strict line on where to show fair use images for philosphical reasons. I strongly prefer a). Modest Geniustalk14:58, 10 February 2023 (UTC)
It is not about "fair use images", it is, for purposes of this policy, "non-free images". If it was only about "fair use", then that WMF legal statement would have been all that was needed. The continual mixing up between fair use and non-free harms this discussion because they are very different beasts. Masem (t) 15:07, 10 February 2023 (UTC)
Actually, no, the WMF didn't say it was ok for us to do this. A representative from their legal team said it was legal to do so. That's an important distinction here. The question was never asked of the WMF Board of Trustees as to whether we could be permitted to do this. I've noted before, but Foundation:Resolution:Licensing policy can not be "circumvented, eroded, or ignored by Wikimedia Foundation officers or staff nor local policies of any Wikimedia project". This change in policy would erode the Founation's policy. Even if this somehow managed to achieve consensus, it couldn't be implemented without approval from the WMF Board of Trustees. --Hammersoft (talk) 17:40, 10 February 2023 (UTC)
Hammersoft, you've said neither side if going to be convinced in this debate. You've also now linked Foundation:Resolution:Licensing policyfive times (borderline bludgeoning), asserting at every turn that this proposal would violate it. When I explained above why this is not the case, you did not reply, and Masem in his reply just pivoted to a slippery slope argument. Yes, we're going to go in circles here if you just keep reiterating the same claims rather than engaging with the arguments made in the discussion.
Masem, I think mixing up between fair use and non-free is a bad-faith reading of the support side's argument. You're welcome to advocate for a set-in-stone non-free image policy stricter than Disney's wildest fever dreams, but just since some of us don't share that view doesn't mean we're confused about the distinction. {{u|Sdkb}}talk19:33, 10 February 2023 (UTC)
Previously you accused me of malfeasance in closing the prior RfC and !voting here. Now you're accusing me of disruptive editing. I asked you to raise the prior issue at XRV. To date you've not done so. Now you're making another accusation against me. You are also now accusing Masem of acting in bad faith. So, I will invite you to take these respective accusation of violating policy/guideline to WP:AN/I. If you're not willing to take these accusations any further either, then I would suggest you stop making accusations of me or anyone else violating policy/guideline. --Hammersoft (talk) 21:04, 10 February 2023 (UTC)
No, it is absolutely necessary to frame this discussion about being "non-free media", not "fair use". Fair use is a lower bar for us that, with that WMF legal's message, appropriate for this application, but no current policy for images on en.wiki is based on treating the images as fair use. It is all about the free content mission and reducing the use of non-free images. Any arguments outside that (such as only talking about "fair use" images) is not really addressing the issue that this RFC is around, whether we should make the exemption for non-frees in search results. Masem (t) 22:58, 10 February 2023 (UTC)
The problem with that is that "fair use" has a real world meaning, whereas we use "free" to mean what we define it to mean. ie certain licences. It is a higher bar than "fair use", but not as high as the vegans would like. Hawkeye7(discuss)01:17, 11 February 2023 (UTC)
Oppose primarily for the same reasons given by many above, but particularly based on what Ivanvector (in their second post), Jayron32 and Seraphimblade posted. I don't really see how an image in search results is going to be any more helpful in general in identifying the subject of an article than the title of the article itself and whatever blurb of the lead can be seen; so, any such us is going to be more decorative than not. I also think the distinction between "fair use" and "non-free use" is an important one to keep making because that is what current policy is based upon. If some feel the time has come to re-assess that distinction, then they can propose such a thing. -- Marchjuly (talk) 01:01, 11 February 2023 (UTC)
Support with caveat the inclusion of non-free images in search results where used in articles. I don't think it can be questioned that there remains value to reader in their inclusion, even at smaller resolutions. The human eye can very readily derive information even at extremely small resolutions, especially in specific contexts.
I recognised the concerns people raise about values creep, its always a challenge with pragmatism. The general idea is that we try to limit use non-free images where no free alternative exists and in particular where it can't exist. Now if we are effectively regulating non-free content use in articles the by-product will be that peripheral usages (like in search results) will reflect that goals of pragmatic but limited use and in service of our readers. If we aren't regulating that well as a community, then I personally believe the far bigger issue is its original inclusion and we should focus on that root cause, and look to ensure we are practicing what we preach. Seddontalk13:53, 14 February 2023 (UTC)
Support, per Seddon and several others. I understand the concerns raised by those opposing, but the argument that creators could be harmed by the inclusion of a tiny thumbnail of the non-free content that is already in the article is not one I find credible. I am on board with the notion that we should be very cautious about any changes that could (further) weaken the "free" nature of the encyclopedia, but I am just not seeing how this particular change would do so to any meaningful or even detectible degree, and it would provide a clear benefit to the reader in the form of a better search experience. 28bytes (talk) 16:24, 15 February 2023 (UTC)
Oppose largely per Ivanvector and Wugapodes. We know that it is almost definitely legal, and that the Foundation will probably let us do it. That doesn't mean we should. The very minimal gain in ease of use isn't worth the cost in diluting our values and mission. It might seem like a good idea, but it is another step down a road that leads to unfortunate places like reducing the reusability of our content. The WordsmithTalk to me20:23, 17 February 2023 (UTC)
Support. Others might be here to provide free content for scraper sites and commercial reusers, but personally, I'm here to build an encyclopaedia. Non-free images help people to use our encyclopaedia for its intended purpose, and that's our primary mission.—S MarshallT/C08:48, 23 February 2023 (UTC)
I'm still waiting for an explanation of how exactly allowing non-free images in search results would discourage publication or use of freely licensed images in articles. Minimizing non-free images is not an end goal in itself — it's subsidiary to the underlying rationale, and if that rationale does not apply in this circumstance, we can and should modify the policy. (This is also my response to the contrary to NFC policy !votes, which is a tautological argument in a discussion about whether or not to modify policy.) {{u|Sdkb}}talk17:16, 15 January 2023 (UTC)
Using free images in search results and not using non-free images in search results gives a (small) incentive to find a free replacement (by emailing potential rights holders etc.) So your proposal makes it less desirable to create free content. —Kusma (talk) 17:41, 15 January 2023 (UTC)
Small indeed! I don't think any editor is ever going to think, "well, I could find a free use image, but since a fair use one would appear in search results, I'll just use that." It's also worth noting that, if a free image is available, the policy already explicitly disallows any non-free one per NFCCP#1. We're not talking here about using non-free images in more articles, just improving their use in articles where there is no alternative and the existing highly restrictive policy already allows for a fair use option.Looking again at the practical examples (BDPs like Leonard Pronko, companies like Starbucks, films like The Grand Budapest Hotel) — in 99% of cases, these are not instances where there's a good free image just waiting to be found or released if we prod/incentize ourselves a little more. They're instances in which it's a non-free image or nothing. That's why the NFCC policy allowed a non-free image to be used there in the first place. And we're just shooting ourselves in the foot if we decide not to make full use of that image. {{u|Sdkb}}talk17:51, 15 January 2023 (UTC)
Existing policy is still highly permissive. For example, we allow album covers to identify the album without even stating who created the artwork in the article. Allowing non-free photographs of deceased people is also a bit of a grey area where it might be possible to persuade people to release an image under a free licence. We shouldn't parasitically hope that German or French or Japanese Wikipedians do all this free content work just because we can rely on fair use. —Kusma (talk) 18:07, 15 January 2023 (UTC)
@Kusma:Existing policy is still highly permissive. Compared to what? We are much much more restrictive in the use of non-free images than fair use law in the US would require. So compared to that, we are not permissive at all. So I'm trying to understand your point. Hobit (talk) 18:11, 27 January 2023 (UTC)
@Hobit: a conceivable limitation would be to allow non-free content only if it is subject to critical commentary. That would allow us to illustrate articles about contemporary artwork by the artwork (it is difficult to talk about visual art without showing the artwork), but not to grab random photos to identify dead people. —Kusma (talk) 18:55, 27 January 2023 (UTC)
Also, there is always the comparison to the websites most similar to the English Wikipedia and which do not allow non-free media. —Kusma (talk) 18:59, 27 January 2023 (UTC)
Is this a modification of policy? I didn't read this RFC that way. All I see is reaching out to get an opinion on fair use which I interpreted as making these images qualify under non-free content criteria with the WMF legal opinion. If this is a questions of modification of policy, that discussion already happened and gained no consensus. In fact, I don't even see any opposition based on a hesitancy about fair use. -- Whpq (talk) 19:10, 15 January 2023 (UTC)
I need to stress that "fair use" is not the same as "non-free". A lot of editors come to this policy with this mistaken assumption and that creates all sorts of problems. By enforcing the non-free policy, we generally assure that any non-free image/file use will meet US fair use allowances (and heck, even non-free images that do not follow this policy have a good chance of being fair use too, we're just being more accountable towards that), but that's considered a happenstance, not the primary goal of policy. Which is why I've mentioned the question poised to WMF about fair use doesn't impact the non-free aspects of search results images. Masem (t) 13:38, 16 January 2023 (UTC)
@Sdkb I opened the original proposal to allow this, but I see both sides. Maybe I can help clarify why this proposal could - and currently is - running negative. Wikipedia was founded as a Free Content project. Many (most?) Wikis don't allow non-free content at all, and there's a significant minority on EnWiki who support eliminating non-free completely. However there's a compelling case for at least some Fair Use, to better serve readers. The established compromise is to allow some highest-value exceptions, under an explicit requirement that they be kept "minimal". Therefore there's no need for anyone to make any case why this particular use should be prohibited. Anyone who wants to add an exception bears the burden of presenting a compelling case for that exception. Article previews did make a compelling case, but in short, the search case is much weaker.
So much of the relations between community and WMF is conflict, that I can be a bit eager to find positive cases showing the WMF that we can work as partners. I was perhaps leaning on wishful optimism when I opened the first proposal on this. I knew it was a bit of a reach. Alsee (talk) 23:15, 17 January 2023 (UTC)
This discussion makes it pretty clear that allowing non-free images in hovercards was a mistake, as this is now being used to further weaken our "free content" principles. —Kusma (talk) 20:19, 15 January 2023 (UTC)
Is there any detail into how/whether these images help readers? If they do, does a cascade to the closest non-free image harm that help? (Either way, a better default image would be an improvement. Maybe a Wikipedia globe?) CMD (talk) 09:22, 3 February 2023 (UTC)
I believe its main benefit is that it makes it easier to identify which result corresponds to what you're looking for without needing to read the full titles or preview text. Some of this disambiguating functionality could be supplemented with alternate default images based on categories. For example, articles in categories of people could have a greyed-out human figure, and institutions a building. small jarstc13:27, 3 February 2023 (UTC)
This is the project page for the Search Improvements project -- the thumbnails were part of the Round 1 mockups at the bottom of the page. This is the phabricator ticket that describes the thumbnail work specifically - it says that "thumbnails can provide a visual anchor on a text heavy page and assist in locating an article". We did user research that shows that images were very important to users when navigating search results. Like you said, it makes search results easier to parse and offers a navigational aid. I hope this helps!
Regarding the harm of a cascade, also a good question (courtesy pinging @Thryduulf as this speaks to your !vote). We can use the example from the intro, which is pretty representative. Do you know what the building pictured at right at search thumbnail size is? I certainly didn't. It's the corporate headquarters of Starbucks, the image that we cascade to when we don't use the logo, but since it just looks like a generic building, it's of effectively zero use as a navigational aide. Compare that to the Starbucks logo, which I'm not going to picture here (lest I be decapitated) but which is still perfectly recognizable at 60px. The thing about logos is that their entire purpose is to be a visual identifier of the brand, so they work excellently as, well, a visual identifier of the brand.
It's a similar situation with other categories. I won't go through them all, but let's consider a plausible scenario related to films as one other example. Let's say a reader comes across a discussion of a film called The Teacher somewhere on the internet that includes the poster as the visual element, and they come to Wikipedia looking to learn more about it. Searching for it will turn up a result list that includes The Teacher (2016 film), The Teacher (2017 film), The Teacher (2022 film), and others. Without the thumbnails, the reader, not knowing the year, will have to read the short descriptions or even click through several times to find the article they're seeking, whereas with the thumbnail they'll be able to instantly identify that it's the one with the red poster of high heels. Those seconds saved, when you multiply by millions and millions of searches, add up to a significant benefit.
First, the problem of the Starbucks image could be fixed if, as has been suggested multiple times to the WMF, if we were able to specify the image to be used in those search results, rather than the first image on the page. For Starbucks, then, a free image of their logo on one of their stores, taken from a very skewed angle, may be a possible replacement (I think, there may be some de minimus issues at play). What we want as the topmost image vs what may be the most representative image in search results are very different. Until we have that feature in play, there's nothing we can do about this
On the poster idea, WP is the 100% wrong place to be doing such an image search. If I know it is a poster for the movie called "The Teacher", the right search tool is over at Google Images, not trying to guess on WP. Even still, the size of the posters that would appear in the results if we allowed non-free would be too small to assume the ability to identify the right now. --Masem (t) 17:30, 3 February 2023 (UTC)
@Masem, we're talking about a 60px image, which is tiny — see the example above. If we're scaling down further to a de minimis-size appearance of a logo within that image, we're down to perhaps roughly 10px depending on the particular photo/how strictly you interpret de minimis. That's hardly a legible size for quick visual scanning. In fact, the Starbucks headquarters building above includes a de minimis logo (above the entrance, and again at the top of the tower), but we missed it, since it's not a legible size. So this is a non-solution. {{u|Sdkb}}talk18:17, 3 February 2023 (UTC)
I wasn't talking a picture of a building, but of a logo on a building so that it takes up a decent %age of the image itself and thus "recognizable" from the 60pz size. And you've just argued that at 60pz images aren't recognizable, and thus we should not expect the image to help in a situation like "The Teacher" example. Masem (t) 18:32, 3 February 2023 (UTC)
With no disrespect intended, the idea that such images would help navigation is a specious argument. The reason is simple; if it helps navigation in search results, the exact same argument can be used with equal force in placing thumbnails in a gallery on Teacher (disambiguation)#Film and television, as well as placing album covers in the next section below at Teacher (disambiguation)#Music. Similarly the same argument can be made to place non-free images on discographies such as Elton John albums discography, and bibliographies such as Stephen King bibliography, and more. Being "helpful" isn't a reason to invalidate our mission. And on we go. There's no middle ground on this dispute. Neither side will be convinced. --Hammersoft (talk) 18:37, 3 February 2023 (UTC)
Quickly following up, Chipmunkdavis, you have some discussion in response to your question now. We just passed the 30-day mark, so if you're persuaded to !vote one way or the other, your input would be welcome. {{u|Sdkb}}talk00:23, 14 February 2023 (UTC)
Comment: I think it's worth highlighting for the closer that the last seven !votes in a row have all been supports, indicating a clear trend toward approval. That could be attributable to the course of the discussion, or it could be attributable to the types of editors now coming to see this. I predicted above that a significant portion (granted, not all) of the early opposition was coming from what even the oppose side has characterized as the minority of Wikipedians who adhere to WP:VEGAN ideas and follow this page closely, and that as a broader editorship more focused on building an encyclopedia for readers rather than fighting fair use images at every possible turn arrived, we'd see the conversation shift. That now seems to be coming to pass. {{u|Sdkb}}talk19:58, 10 February 2023 (UTC)
Consensus isn't decided by how many !votes are on one side or the other, nor is it decided by only looking at the first few days of a proposal or the last few days. If you want to count votes; two days into this RfC, we were at 50%. 12 days into the RfC, we were at 50% again. Now, 28 days in, we're at 54.5%. That's hardly much change. There's always going to be ups and downs in any significant data set over time. You are obviously biased in favor of a close that supports this use. I'm not saying this to accuse you in any way, but rather noting bias causes a different read of all the discussion above. Taken from other perspectives, many of the !votes in support of this proposal are lacking impact for failing to discern WMF approval as being a separate thing from legal approval, and/or failing to discern the difference between fair use law and the non-free content policy. The introduction of an answer from a legal perspective has, from this perspective, done considerable harm to attaining consensus because of such approval being misinterpreted by some. I'm sure you can be just as critical of people opposing this proposal. In reading my comments here right now I'm guessing you're considering how to respond to decimate my argument. Fair enough, but understand that consensus isn't vote counting, nor is it guessing what the community might be moving towards in the future. --Hammersoft (talk) 21:34, 10 February 2023 (UTC)
The support percentage in the early period dipped as low as 33% (after the first dozen !votes); rising more than 20 percentage points from that seems like more than a statistical fluke to me. You're correct that neither of us is impartial here, thus why we have uninvolved closers. {{u|Sdkb}}talk22:39, 10 February 2023 (UTC)
The discussion above is closed. Please do not modify it. Subsequent comments should be made on the appropriate discussion page. No further edits should be made to this discussion.
Potential violation of TOP100 and CLIST
Over at WT:FILM, user Jovian Eclipse raised the potential violation of WP:TOP100 and WP:CLIST by a number of film lists (here and here). Because I am not familiar with the policy, I have brought the question here. The lists in question are as follows:
I suspect that at least a substantial portion of these lists are in fact problematic, and if so, I wonder whether more needs to be done to avoid this. Maybe a custom WP:Editnotice would do for pages like this? — HTGS (talk)04:41, 27 February 2023 (UTC)
Thank you Sdkb! I think as long as there's a link to this policy, questions are probably best directed to the place people want to answer them. — HTGS (talk)00:49, 28 February 2023 (UTC)
If the list in question is solely based on opinions of one or more writers - and not done through a jury or poll type system (like the Oscars, which makes the selection more objective) - then per the policy we cannot have the full list in a given article. (The AFI ones have been cleared with their approval) A top 100 list may only list up to the first 10, for example. Masem (t) 20:11, 27 February 2023 (UTC)
A top 100 list may only list up to the first 10, for example. @Masem, I wasn't aware of that; is it documented somewhere? And any thoughts on my question above re questions? {{u|Sdkb}}talk20:55, 27 February 2023 (UTC)
Masem, do you have a link to the decision or information about the AFI lists? On reading that part myself, I assumed it meant that the AFI lists were open licensed but couldn’t see that on their site (eg [8]). — HTGS (talk)00:55, 28 February 2023 (UTC)
Definitely start by AfD'ing all the ones that fail WP:GNG. Then, we can debate about the removal of the remaining lists and emphasizing the encyclopedic aspects of the lists. As for including only a portion of the lists, it's a bit unclear what cutoff should be used to meet WP:NFCC#3b and WP:NFCC#5, if excerpts are permissible at all. –LaundryPizza03 (dc̄) 02:02, 22 March 2023 (UTC)
That is not appropriate removal. List articles can use selective non-free images, just not on most or every single entry. Nor is this the non-free issue at discussion here, which is when the text part of the list may be a problem. Masem (t) 12:07, 25 March 2023 (UTC)
Non-free media samples
I think there's been a huge oversight in non-free media particular music snippets or snippets of songs. Ever since the digital era, songs have Digital Rights Management attached to them. The majority of music is now streamed via Tidal, Spotify, Pandora and Apple Music, with a few other key market players. It is impossible to legitimately or legally obtain snippets or soundbites of contemporary music without ripping songs from YouTube, or another illegal site and using something like audacity to snip the song into a suitable size for use on wikipedia. The fact we allow music snippets actively promotes the illegal download/ripping of music - there is no legal or legitimate way to obtain samples of contemporary music as it was never intended to appear as an MP3 (or similar) format on a user's device. It's intended to be streamed or consumed via an app not as a file on someone's device. The current set-up on wiki allows and promotes the circumvention of artists' rights and promotes copyright violation. I think there's a need for a discussion about the purpose of non-free media sound files and the practicalities of allowing them when in reality they cannot be obtained legally even if the way they appear on wikipedia respects copyright law. >>Lil-unique1(talk) — 15:49, 24 March 2023 (UTC)
Music is still released on CDs or through purchasable options. So the theory that music is only meant for streaming is not true, and we're definitely not in violation of that. Even if that was true, IANAL but the case law on time-shifting linear broadcast television (Sony Corp. of America v. Universal City Studios, Inc.) would mean that our use of short snippets of streamed songs is also fair use. Masem (t) 18:32, 24 March 2023 (UTC)
Okay point taken on music which is released via CD/LP. However, DRM on CDs means that ripping or transferring from a CD to another format i.e. MP3 on a computer is considered illegal. The whole point of rights management is to prevent one person buying the medium to simply create other copies to transfer/allow others to listen without contributing to the original transaction. Furthermore, more contemporary releases are sometimes only released digitally and therefore when songs are released for streaming there's no legal way to obtain a snippet. Its entirely feasible that media which is only available to stream is included as non-free media snippets on wikipedia when there is no legal way to obtain and upload a sample. While fair use does apply to the use of the sample, the act of downloading or creating a copy for fair use is not considered legal. An example of this is photocopying an academic textbook. You can copy a set number of pages for personal academic use without commerciality. However, you cannot upload and use the copied pages without then obtaining permission from the author(s). I'm not sure that the time-shifting linear broadcast case law quoted is quite the same here. I'm going to look into this one further as I believe there are loopholes in our processes and I'm not convinced "the snippets we hold are fair use" is enough to mean Wikipedia is legally and ethically compliant with copy right law. There is a lack of guidance around how we treat samples and snippets. The act of having a sample to demonstrate a point is legal and fair use however, we should be ethically and legally providing advice and guidance on how to obtain such samples. The outcome might be legal (i.e. sharing a small sample of a song) but the means to get there seems to be murky waters. If wikipedia had a plug in to streaming platforms and they held the rights to the physical snippet/hosted it then it would be different. It feels to me like we're saying "we don't care/it doesn't matter how you obtain the snippet but as long as you satisfy WP:NFCC and attribute it with the non-free license, this is okay". >>Lil-unique1(talk) — 00:42, 27 March 2023 (UTC)
Wikimedia does have a legal team, and many of these questions have been asked and established in the past. They're very knowledgeable on fair use rights and the like, and they would have warned us long ago if our non-free media sample approaches were breaking fair use allowances. Masem (t) 01:14, 27 March 2023 (UTC)
@Lil-unique1: You're asking questions that most likely none of us here are really capable of answering to your satisfaction simply because of WP:LD. Perhaps, you'd be better off contacting the WMF Legal directly and see what they have to say. If it agrees with your assessment, then it should be able to provide guidance on how the current WP:NFCC needs to be revised. Perhaps, based upon what you've posted above, the WMF will need to modify the EDP part of wmf:Resolution:Licensing policy because what you're posting about likely would affect all local Wikipedia projects that allow non-free content to be used. -- Marchjuly (talk) 01:24, 27 March 2023 (UTC)
I can still buy an album online easily and have it in an easily-transferrable MP3 or AAC-formatted file, albeit watermarked to the purchaser; the days of a music piece being stuck behind DRM are long over. It's fair use, not used in full, and unless the file is some absurdely-named thing from LimeWire that somehow got uploaded here, properly sourced. Nate•(chatter)22:29, 29 March 2023 (UTC)
This non-free image was previously in use on 2019 Saskatchewan Roughriders season, 2020 Saskatchewan Roughriders season, 2021 Saskatchewan Roughriders season, 2022 Saskatchewan Roughriders season, and 2023 Saskatchewan Roughriders season. I removed the image per WP:NFC#UUI #17, since it's the logo that is the copyrightable part. I also removed the rationales for use on those articles from the image description page. I was reverted by @Cmm3:, who indicated that the image isn't a logo therefore WP:NFC#UUI #17 doesn't apply. I started a discussion on their talk page, noting that the logo is the only thing that's copyrightable on the image, and thus it does apply even if we did use that assertion. I wouldn't mind extra eyes on that. Further, I'm curious what others might think about this image being not eligible for copyright, as the logo is very poor resolution and at this resolution it's little more than a styled "S". Thoughts? --Hammersoft (talk) 03:00, 11 May 2023 (UTC)
It seems like WP:FREER might apply here in a couple of ways. First, I think there are ways for generic images of uniforms to be created in infoboxes using templates or other wikicode (at least that seems to be what is done for soccer teams). Even if that can't be worked out for professional football teams, the primary teams colors should be something that can be sufficiently understood from text alone without the reader needed to see a non-free image. However, if a non-free image of a team's uniform is deemed justifiable per WP:NFCCP, it would seem that only the use in the primary article about the team itself would be a valid non-free use. Trying to use the same image in other article (e.g. individual season articles) would be a violation of WP:NFCC#3, except in cases where perhaps there's a strong contextual connection between a particular uniform design and a particular season (e.g. an anniversary or other type of commemorative season). The way I look at WP:NFC#UUI is that it's intended to provide some examples of non-free content use which are generally not considered acceptable. So, item 17 of WP:NFC#UUI specifically making reference to logos doesn't mean its application is stricly limited to logos; logos are just one example (a common example) of unnecessarily repetative non-free use and item 17 could be applied to other types of non-free content as well, at least in my opinion. As for whether File:Saskatchewan Roughriders logo.svg needs to be non-free, that's an interesting question. c:COM:TOO United States and c:COM:TOO Canada seem to be similar and there are logos with a similar degree of complexity found on Commons as {{PD-logo}}. Even if it were only PD in the US, {{PD-ineligible-USonly}} could be worth considering. The helmet logo seems to be the only possible copyrightable element of the entire uniform and if that's not a problem, then there's should be no reason why File:CFL SSK Jersey.png needs to be non-free. Finally, just going to provide a link to c:Category:National Football League uniforms for reference. I'm not stating all of the uniform files in that category are OK for Commons (some probably aren't due to the copyright status of the helmet logo), but the unforms themselves should be considered utilitarian enough per c:COM:CB#Clothing to, in principle, not be eligible for copyright protection under US copyright law. -- Marchjuly (talk) 03:56, 11 May 2023 (UTC)
Okay, so is it against the rules for uniform images to be included in season-by-season articles? Cmm3 (talk) 19:01, 12 May 2023 (UTC)
There is one allowance for non-frees on season pages. If a new uniform is introduced and some discussion about the new uniform is discussed through sources, then it is fair to introduce the non-free image of the uniform though not in the infobox but where the uniform change is made. Masem (t) 17:38, 13 May 2023 (UTC)
Non-free licensed images
Some images are classified as non-free by Wikipedia standards, but are available under a license that permits educational, personal, or otherwise non-commercial use and/or prohibits derivative works. These include certain Creative Commons lisences.
CC defines commercial use as one “primarily intended for or directed toward commercial advantage or monetary compensation.” Wikipedia, as a non-profit organisation, does not violate this prohibition.
These images could therefore seemingly be used without a claim of fair use, but one is required anyway. Why? Is there a good reason behind it? The licensing policy does not require it, only an "applicable rationale", which could be other than free use.
The main problem I have with this is that the policy mandates (and bots enforce) that all non-free files be low resolution. That is solely to comply with fair use rules and would be unnecessary under the CC licenses. Best, CandyScythe (talk) 19:54, 5 May 2023 (UTC)
Because we aim to produce a work that can be used, reused, redistributed, and modified by any entity in the world, including commercial entities, we require that free licenses allow for commercial use and for modification. This is defined by the WMF's resolution, using the definition of "free" set out here [9].
This is why we don't call any of this "fair use", because it is purposely stricter than fair use. Masem (t) 20:04, 5 May 2023 (UTC)
I understand that, but how does systematically reducing image resolutions when not necessary for compliance advance our goal to "produce a work that can be used, reused, redistributed, and modified by any entity in the world"? Best, CandyScythe (talk) 20:08, 5 May 2023 (UTC)
I'm sorry, but did you read my original message? This is explicitly about files that would not require fair use consideration. Best, CandyScythe (talk) 20:27, 5 May 2023 (UTC)
Hi CandyScythe. Is this just a general question or is it specifically related to your relicensing of File:Katawa Shoujo logo.png as {{PD-logo}} and then re-uploading the file as such to Commons? If it's a general question, then I think the issue might be that Wikipedia doesn't accept NC, ND or NCND CC licenses; any files licensed as such are going to be treated as non-free content for Wikipedia's purposes which means they are likely going to be resized or reduced in resolution if deemed necessary. Files that are originally uploaded locally to Wikipedia under acceptable CC licenses shouldn't be being reduced in either size or resolution. If you've noticed this to be the case, then perhaps you can provide an example of such a file.If this is about a particular file like the Katawa logo, then it's possible that the file was originally uploaded as non-free just because the uploader assumed that was what needed to be done for the file. Sometimes a file is later determined through discussion to not need to be non-free and then any older higher resolution versions can be restored at that time. File uploads aren't vetted before being uploaded and thus tend to not be assessed right away. Sometimes an assessment takes place years after a file has been uploaded and often it only happens when someone, for whatever reason, decides to take a closer look at the file n question. -- Marchjuly (talk) 21:11, 5 May 2023 (UTC)
That logo is obviously not public domain, having substantial creativity in the form of the heart, crossed bandages(?) and text orientation. Unless the creators have dedicated it to the public domain or it got there in some other way. The creativity threshold of copyright law is extremely low and merely shifting the orientation of one letter a little might suffice. As the logo of a work the policies applying to logos would apply. Jamesday (talk) 00:18, 21 May 2023 (UTC)
Respectfully, the US threshold of originality for text and basic geometric shapes is VERY high, not "extremely low". Example: [10] Best, CandyScythe (talk) 01:00, 21 May 2023 (UTC)
CandyScythe, yes I did read it. I don't think you're understanding what I'm saying. Images available under a Creative Commons NonCommercial license have to meet WP:NFCC. Since Wikipedia's content could be re-used in a commercial context, we require that images not available under a free license that is compatible with our requirements to comply with fair use law, and the more restrictive WP:NFCC policy. So, yeah they would require fair use consideration. That's where the prior discussions are relevant. --Hammersoft (talk) 21:43, 5 May 2023 (UTC)
@Marchjuly This question really spurred from the other images (screenshots) in the Katawa article, as the game is NCND CC licensed, and the images could therefore, in theory, have been of much higher quality, as they originally had been, before a bot had reduced them years after they were added.
I see now that this is an ideological choice rather than a legal requirement that Wikipedia has to follow, but I do question its reasoning. I understand that we cannot use a license saying "only Wikipedia can use this", as that would prevent mirroring and other reuse, but as a CC license would not restrict reusers any more than it would Wikipedia, I fail to see why it would not be preferable to a claim of fair use. Obviously, it would not be ideal, but more so than fair use. Best, CandyScythe (talk) 21:48, 5 May 2023 (UTC)
Reduced size makes sense for commercial images, as it goes to minimal use and respect for commercial opportunities, but there is no reason whatsoever for applying it to non-commercial images. Other requirements such as a rationale are reasonable, but the size reduction makes no sense at all. Hawkeye7(discuss)22:25, 5 May 2023 (UTC)
My understanding is that this is not a WMF issue, but an English Wikipedia one. While the WMF considers those licenses non-free, the licensing policy authorizes projects to develop and adopt an Exemption Doctrine Policy consistent with the resolution. Maybe a more formal request for comment might be in order, given that even experienced editors appear to have diverging views on this. Best, CandyScythe (talk) 23:56, 5 May 2023 (UTC)
But as I pointed out, the WMF resolution requires that we encourage free image (ones free to redistribute and modify by anyone without limitation) and take steps to limit all others - the non-free. How to do that is up to each project, but that still means that a CC-NC license is a non-free file. While we could use such images at full size, we also want to make sure that those wanting to reuse WP content have the best chance, and thus we follow the same approach for CC-NC as if they were copyrighted works. Masem (t) 00:27, 6 May 2023 (UTC)
@Hawkeye7: I'm unsure if there's one clear cut way to assess whether a file is "commercial" or "non-commercial" since how it is being re-used probably depends on who ultimately is re-using it. There may and likely will be differences in opinion among Wikipedia users as to whether a particular file has viable commercial applications and thus needs to be reduced per WP:NFCC#3b (i.e. WP:IMAGERES). There is, however, no way to know that until it has been uploaded and assessed. Since all ten WP:NFCCP need to be met for a non-free use to be considered valid, files may need to be discussed on a per image basis at WP:FFD to see whether a consensus is established for it not needing to be reduced. You could try WP:BOLDy adding {{Non-free no reduce}} to a file's page, but this could be challenged by someone else and you're back to FFD to see whether a consensus could be established. -- Marchjuly (talk) 23:39, 5 May 2023 (UTC)
If a copyright owner has licensed the file to the general public under a CC license, then I don't see how Wikipedia's use of that file under the license could in any way affect the copyright holder's commercial opportunities. So I don't think there would be any need to assess whether the file has "viable commercial applications". Best, CandyScythe (talk) 00:23, 6 May 2023 (UTC)
Use by Wikipedia isn't the only thing that is being considered. If that were the case, then simple fair use would most likely be sufficient for Wikipedia's purposes. Reuse by Wikipedia downstream users also seems to be considered, and for that the WMF seems to want make the content it hosts as free as possible to make it as easy to reuse as possible. -- Marchjuly (talk) 02:16, 6 May 2023 (UTC)
I'm talking about Creative Commons Non-Commercial (CC-NC) licensed images, of which I have a large number, many created by myself. That they are non-commercial is not in dispute - it is written in the licence. Hawkeye7(discuss)00:28, 6 May 2023 (UTC)
Content licensed as CC-NC can be uploaded locally to Wikipedia as non-free content, but it still needs to meet all ten NFCCP. If you feel a file shouldn't be reduced, then that can be discussed on a per file basis. If a consensus is established that it shouldn't be reduced, then it won't. A CC-NC license, however, is still less free for Wikipedia's purposes than, for example, a CC-by-SA license, which means that the NC file would still need to meet WP:FREER to be OK as non-free. -- Marchjuly (talk) 02:16, 6 May 2023 (UTC)
You seem to possibly be misunderstanding what is meant by non-commercial. Say I was to take one of your images and use it as a book's cover art and sell the book. That would undeniably be commercial use by me. If your license only allowed non-commercial use that would also not be use in accordance with your licence and likely to be copyright infringement. Same image used in a news story about your work, even one that charges money, is likely to be fair use, fair dealing and similar. If the publication is not for profit it might or might not be non-commercial depending on use and licence details. In addition, your use of a license like CC-NC that doesn't allow commercial reuse makes your images almost certainly incompatible with Wikipedia's objectives, which include commercial reuse. If you wish to see them widely used in Wikipedia you're going to need to use a license which allows commercial reuse. Jamesday (talk) 22:42, 20 May 2023 (UTC)