User:Jarry1250/Petition
Only
63
signatories so far!
We the undersigned petition the Prime Minister to review the rights of the public to re-use any photograph of a public domain work of art.
We would like the Prime Minister to hold a review of the copyright status of 2D works which are merely exact reproductions of existing 2D works in the public domain.
This issue was raised under Bridgeman v. Corel in the US; we would like a similar freedom to be established in the UK. This would contribute towards the use of the internet as a learning facility; the broadening of cultural horizons and end the growing uncertainty about the situation currently.
Premise
[edit]I thought it might be an idea, given recent events, to at least petition for a review - a decision, one way or the other.
Personally, I feel like this would be a worthwhile undertaking: little effort is required by anyone in particular, and I think it highlights the best of the wiki format. I do, however, recognise that not everyone will agree with the sentiments expressed. Also, it is important that this is not specifically related to recent events, else we risk ruining much hard work. I am happy to take relevant comments here, of course. Though I cannot now edit the petition with ease, I may be able to get it deleted if it were to have a negative effect.
A number of other good reasons have emerged from the for camp since the petition was sent for approval. As the specific intent is to a force a review rather than a particular decision (that could come later) I think we're alright, thankfully.
Signing the petition
[edit]Signing the petition requires some personal details, but nothing other than a full name is published and it would be difficult to correlate these to usernames. Anyone can sign, as long as they live in the UK (or a crown dependency, I think) or are an expatriate. It will take most people no longer than 30 seconds!
If you want to sign the petition, copy and paste " petitions.number10.gov.uk/publicdomain/ " into your address bar, hit enter and fill in the little form.