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Study: Wikipedia's growth may indicate unlimited potential
According to a new study, Wikipedia has a pattern of growth that may indicate unlimited potential.
In a study published in the August issue of Communications of the ACM entitled "The Collaborative Organization of Knowledge" (abstract; working draft), computer scientists Diomidis Spinellis and Panagiotis Louridas analyze the relationship between references to non-existent articles (redlinks) and the creation of new articles.
The study, based on the February 2006 dump of English Wikipedia, finds that the link rate from complete (i.e., non-stub) articles to incomplete (non-existent or stub) articles remained nearly constant between 2003 and 2006 (about 1.8 incomplete articles linked from every complete article). A long-term trend in either direction, according to the authors, would indicate an unsustainable growth pattern. If the average number of redlinks per article is increasing, it means that Wikipedia is becoming diffuse and will become less useful as more and more of the terms in the average article are not covered. If the average number is decreasing, it suggests that Wikipedia's growth will slow or stop as the number of links to uncreated articles approaches zero. The stable redlink ratio suggests that Wikipedia is a scale-free network, in principle capable of unlimited growth.
The study also notes that most new articles were created within the first month that they were referenced in another article. Furthermore, only 3% of new articles were created by the same user who created the first link to that article (whether as a redlink or a bluelink). This implies that the connection between redlinks and new articles is a collaborative one, and that adding redlinks actually spurs others to create new articles.
The statistics were re-run with a more recent dump (from January 3, 2008), with results that "don't appear to differ from the ones based on the study's 2006 data set", according to Spinellis (User:Diomidis Spinellis). Wikipedia's growth rate peaked in late 2006, and it declined slightly in 2007 and in the first 7 months of 2008. According to the updated statistics, the incomplete:complete ratio has been dropping gradually since early 2006, and was less than 1.4 in January 2008. However, Spinellis argues that "As long as the ratio is above 1.0, growth as we know it should continue."
Earlier studies
A 2006 study, "Preferential attachment in the growth of social networks: The case of Wikipedia", showed that Wikipedia's early growth (through June 2004) demonstrated preferential attachment: highly-linked articles were more likely to be the target of new links. According to the authors, this indicates one of two things: either Wikipedia editors failed to take full advantage of the wiki model to create a more balanced network, or preferential attachment to highly-linked articles results from "the intrinsic organization of the underlying knowledge". The former case would indicate that Wikipedia's structure cannot overcome the "bounded rationality" of its contributors, each of whom may have limited knowledge beyond his/her area of activity.
The new study is consistent with a "bounded rationality" model, since the creation of new articles depends significantly on the topics editors choose to link to from existing articles. However, it also suggests a possible mechanism for achieving more balanced coverage, as less-covered areas will contain more redlinks, leading to more coverage and even more redlinks.
In contrast to many of the academic studies of Wikipedia, long-term observers within the community have tended to analyze Wikipedia's growth trends in terms of changing content conventions and social dynamics. For example, in a series of blog posts from 2007 ("Wikipedia Plateau?", "Unwanted: New articles in Wikipedia", and "Two Million English Wikipedia articles! Celebrate?") Andrew Lih (User:Fuzheado) examined some of the community factors limiting new article creation. An analysis of article creation and deletion logs by User:Dragons flight from late 2007 showed that for every three articles created, one article was deleted.
A more complete picture of how the size and activity level of the English Wikipedia community has evolved in recent months and years should be available once Erik Zachte updates his statistics website with a recent dump. Zachte was recently hired as a Data Analyst by the Wikimedia Foundation.
Board of Trustees fills Nominating Committee for new members
On 8 August, Wikimedia Board of Trustees Chair Michael Snow announced the filling of a Nominating Committee, responsible for nominating candidates to fill the four "specific expert" seats on the Board, two of which are currently occupied (and whose terms expire on December 31, 2008). The Committee's six members are:
- Michael Snow
- Ting Chen, the newest Board member
- Sue Gardner, Wikimedia Foundation Executive Director
- Melissa Hagemann, Wikimedia Advisory Board member
- Miloš Rančić
- BirgitteSB
Snow describes how the Committee will handle the search over the next few months:
Initially, once the committee has been briefed, it will work on identifying the types of expertise that are most needed and developing criteria to evaluate candidates. At that point, we will more actively solicit suggestions for potential board members, including recommendations from the community. But if you have input that would be useful as we look to strengthen the board's skills, feel free to contact us at any stage of the process.
The Nominating Committee will make suggestions for the four positions. One of those "specific expert" seats has been held by Jan-Bart de Vreede since December 2006, while another seat was filled in April, with the appointment of Stu West, the Board's treasurer and a former senior executive at Yahoo!, TiVo and JPMorgan Chase. The other two seats were not filled upon the Board's April restructuring, with the plan that they would be filled either in late 2008 or early 2009.
The positions are open to both community members and outsiders; however, the stated goal of the Board is to fill the seats with candidates who have an expertise in an area useful for supervision of the Foundation. The positions of de Vreede and West are not guaranteed, as all four seats will open up at the end of the year, and the Board could choose not to bring back one or both of the incumbent Trustees.
According to the question-and-answer page regarding the Board's restructuring in April, the Committee will make their suggestions by October 15, though it's unclear whether that guideline still applies. The Board will then have the option to appoint anyone listed on the Committee's list of candidates.
The one-year terms will begin on January 1, 2009, and end on December 31. In the unlikely event that the Board should make an appointment prior to the end of the year, the appointment would expire on December 31, 2008 along with all other "specific expert" seats, but could be renewed for another year.
Greenspun illustration project moves to first phase
The Philip Greenspun illustration project, first authorized in September 2007 and announced in November, has reached its first phase of collecting illustrations in exchange for payments to contributors. In this phase, with 50 image requests, nearly US$2,000 may be distributed, mainly in increments of $40.
The first round was announced by Brianna Laugher, who has been in charge of the project. Of the 50 images, 48 will offer $40 payments, while two (grape and apochromatic lens) will pay out $15.
The illustrations are tracked using a bug tracker on the toolserver. The tracker is otherwise used mainly for bugs with toolserver-based tools, but a queue was added specifically for illustrations in order to track each request separately and efficiently. For each image, a volunteer comes forward and is assigned to that image; upon uploading the image, Laugher and other volunteers ensure that the image illustrates the concept correctly. Once all requirements are satisfied, payment will be made to the volunteer.
For Round 1, the list of requests includes such wide-ranging illustrations as Abney effect, Jellyfish and a request for an animation of Vomiting.
Laugher apologized for the nine-month wait between the announcement and the start of the project, noting that she had made a few mistakes in underestimating the volume and complexity of requests, and did not delegate tasks enough. WAS 4.250 replied, "In short, you are human."
Round 1 runs through October 10. As of press time, 19 of the 50 images had been assigned, and of those 19, three were "in review".
WikiWorld: "George Stroumboulopoulos"
- This comic originally appeared on October 22, 2007.
This week's WikiWorld comic uses text from "George Stroumboulopoulos" and "The Hour". The comic is released under the Creative Commons Attribution ShareAlike 2.5 license for use on Wikipedia and elsewhere.
News and notes
Wikipedian Jeffpw passes away
Wikipedian Jeffpw passed away on 7 August. Jeff, a resident of Amsterdam, made over 9,000 edits since joining Wikipedia in May 2005. He was active in the LGBT studies WikiProject, and was largely responsible for bringing James Robert Baker to featured article status, and bringing Daniel Rodriguez to good article status.
Over the past few weeks, Jeff had been coping with the death of his husband, Isaac, something that friends within the Wikipedia community had been helping him with. Jeff's death was brought to the attention of the community by his sister, Debbie, who left a note on Jeff's talk page, thanking his friends:
Hello, I'm Debbie. Many of you have given your support and condolences to Jeffpw over the last many weeks since he lost Isaac. I'm Jeff's sister (and know nothing about Wikipedia, except that my brother enjoyed the site, the friendship and support).
I hope I'm going about this in the right way, if not, I'm so sorry.
My brother died yesterday- I suppose of a broken heart. But he received so much compassion from all of you, and you all made these last days (almost) bearable to him. I am so grateful to you and HE was so grateful. He intended to acknowledge each condolence sent to him individually, but since he can't, I thought I'd let you know.
The world will have a little less color without him. I love him and miss him already.
This statement was confirmed by checkuser evidence.
In Jeff's memory, a user sub-page has been created, containing condolences from the community. Jeff was 46 years old.
2,500,000th article
On Monday, the 2.5 millionth English article was created. No official attempt was made to determine what the milestone article was, although it has been suggested that Joe Connor, one of 35 pre-written stubs added by Wizardman, might be the milestone article.
Tech job openings
Three new job openings at the Wikimedia Foundation were all advertised this week, all within the technology department. The jobs are:
- Mid-level software developer: A full-time position; responsible for MediaWiki development, and configuration of Wikimedia websites and third-party software.
- Entry-level software developer/IT support: A full-time position; responsible for development of MediaWiki and open-source software used by the Foundation, and for providing technical support for the Foundation's office.
- Mid-level system administrator: A position open to remote work; responsible for configuring software, maintaining servers and backups, and assisting with the planning of hardware configuration.
All positions are open until August 27.
Briefly
- Newyorkbrad has returned to editing, and to the Arbitration Committee. His term is scheduled to expire in December 2010.
- Videos from Wikimania 2008 are now available for download in .mpg format.
- After a long wait, the IRC Group Contacts have been allowed to set new cloaks for all Wikimedia projects.
- The Upper Sorbian Wikipedia has reached 5,000 articles.
- The Hebrew Wikipedia has reached 80,000 articles.
- The Korean Wikipedia has reached 70,000 articles.
- The Irish Wikipedia has reached 7,000 articles.
- The Malayalam Wikipedia has reached 7,000 articles.
- The Malayalam Wiktionary has reached 3,000 entries.
- The Gujarati Wikipedia has reached 2,000 articles.
Dispatches: Reviewing free images
Wikipedia's best articles are often enhanced by images. Indeed, the featured article criteria ask for "images and other media where appropriate" and that, as for the use of all images in Wikipedia, they should have "acceptable copyright status. Non-free images or media must satisfy the criteria for inclusion of non-free content and be labeled accordingly." Similarly, the good article criteria require that images be "tagged with their copyright status" and that valid fair use rationales be provided for non-free content.
Images on Wikipedia are classified as either "free" or "non-free":
- "Free" images are in the public domain or are copyrighted but have no restrictions on derivatives, commercial use and permission for use.
- "Non-free" images (those with a "fair use" justification) retain restrictions on derivatives, commercial use and permission for use; therefore, they are allowed on Wikipedia only under the restrictive terms of the non-free content criteria.
This dispatch discusses free images, and explains how to ascertain whether or not an image is actually free. A future Dispatch will cover the use of non-free images.
Although all Wikipedia content is expected to have acceptable copyright status, featured article candidates receive particular scrutiny for compliance with the image usage policy. Examining image licenses is not always straightforward. Ultimately, it is a matter of confirming that a copyright tag is present and that the information provided is sufficient to corroborate the tag that has been selected.
Copyright and copyleft
Copyright is a legal protection granting the creator of an original work – for our purposes here, an image – exclusive rights to that work. These rights prevent others from copying, redistributing or modifying the image without the author's permission. Copyright is generated automatically on the creation of such a work.
Copyright holders may choose to relinquish some or all of their rights, for example, by licensing their image so that others may copy, redistribute, or modify it without seeking permission. Such licenses are typically called "copyleft" licenses – a play on the word "copyright". Copyleft images are still under copyright; their creators have merely waived some, but not all of the protection that copyright affords them.
Commonly used licenses include:
- Creative Commons (CC). These are a range of licenses that govern the copying, redistribution and modification of an image. CC licenses are modular: the "base" license ("CC-by") requires just attribution. This may be supplemented by additional conditions such as SA (share alike: all derivatives must be published with the same license), NC (no commercial usage) and ND (no derivatives). For example, CC-by, CC-by-NC, and CC-by-NC-ND are possible variations. Not all variants are copyleft or are acceptable on Wikipedia (see "common misconceptions" below).
- GNU Free Documentation License (GFDL). This allows for the copying, redistribution and modification of an image, even for commercial purposes. (Incidentally, this is the license under which Wikipedia prose is published.) Attribution is always required.
Public domain
Works in the public domain are not owned, controlled or otherwise restricted by any person, entity or law in a given jurisdiction. A public domain image may be freely used, altered and published by the public at large without condition.
Generally, an image enters the public domain when it is no longer eligible for copyright protection, usually a certain number of years after its first publication or after its creator's death. The length of time before copyright protection lapses varies greatly from country to country. Because the Wikimedia Foundation servers are located in Florida, images used on the Wikipedia must be in the public domain in the United States.[1] Non-US images hosted on Wikipedia are not required to be public domain in their country of origin provided that they are public domain in the United States. Images hosted on the Wikimedia Commons, by contrast, must be public domain in both the United States and their country of origin; compliance with Commons policy, however, does not figure in the FA or GA criteria.
Copyright terms in the US vary according to several conditions. The most common encountered on Wikipedia are:
- published works, for which copyright has expired if the image was first published in the US before January 1, 1923; and
- unpublished works, for which copyright has expired where the creator has been dead at least 70 years.
An image may also be voluntarily released to the public domain by its copyright holder or, in certain cases, may not be eligible for protection in the first place.
Reviewing images
Article reviewers generally need to take into account three aspects:
- ensuring that policy-mandated elements are present;
- ensuring the claims of the copyright tag are supported by the source; and
- consideration of possible legal nuances.
Policy-mandated elements
Wikipedia's image usage policy requires all images to have three pieces of information:
- A copyright tag
- A verifiable source
- An image summary
1. A copyright tag is a template, typically rectangular and appearing towards the bottom of an image page. The tag indicates the image's license or, if public domain, the reason the image is no longer eligible for copyright protection. The {{GFDL}} copyright tag, for example, appears as follows:
Permission is granted to copy, distribute and/or modify this document under the terms of the GNU Free Documentation License, Version 1.2 or any later version published by the Free Software Foundation; with no Invariant Sections, no Front-Cover Texts, and no Back-Cover Texts. |
If this file is eligible for relicensing, it may also be used under the Creative Commons Attribution-ShareAlike 3.0 license. The relicensing status of this image has not yet been reviewed. You can help. |
2. A verifiable source can be in the form of a simple weblink, citation for the published work from which the image was scanned or the name and method of contact for the author. The format and location of sourcing information on an image description page may vary. Optimally, images will use the {{Information}} template, which provides organized source and summary information. This template is not mandatory, however, and the information may be "hidden" within template boilerplate (example), if present at all.
3. An image summary provides the "necessary details to support the use of the image copyright tag". WP:IUP recommends the following:
- Description: The image subject
- Source: The copyright holder of the image or weblink, published work, etc. from which the image came
- Date: The date the image was created
- Location: The location in which the image was created
- Author: The image creator and/or copyright holder
- Permission: Who or what law or policy gives permission to post on Wikipedia with the selected image copyright tag
- Other versions of this file: Derivatives of the image, if they exist on Wikipedia
Source
After confirming the presence of the three required elements, reviewers should also examine the source provided. Like prose quotations or statistics, images should have verifiable and reliable sourcing. By their very nature, image copyright tags (especially those claiming public domain) are "material challenged or likely to be challenged" and, consequently, subject to Wikipedia's verifiability policy (WP:V) and the necessity of utilizing reliable sources (WP:RS).
Consider, for example, the following copyright tag:
This file is in the public domain because its copyright has expired in the United States and those countries with a copyright term of no more than the life of the author plus 100 years.
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An image employing this copyright tag would be expected to have a reliable source explicitly indicating the author's date of death or dating the image such that no reasonable scenario would contradict the claim (e.g. the author of a painting dated 1740 could not possibly have been dead less than 100 years).
The following are examples of correctly formatted, verifiable and reliable sourcing:
- Weblink (example): Images from websites should not link directly to the image itself, but to a page on which the image is used that also contains information to corroborate the copyright tag.
- Published source (example): Images from published material should contain enough information to identify the specific edition of the book, journal issue, magazine, etc. from which the image came (e.g. merely citing The New Yorker is insufficient).
- Author contact (example): Images sourced to an author (typically "self made" images) should explicitly indicate the author and provide a link to a user page or other means of contact.
WP:V notes that "the appropriateness of any source always depends on the context". A Geocities site, for example, claiming that an image is public domain will probably not be considered sufficiently reliable to support the claim. Institutional and research sites (e.g. libraries, museums and archival sites such as the Library of Congress) are generally the most reliable.
Legal nuances
Copyright law is often nuanced and esoteric; consequently, there are many concepts of which image authors and uploaders may not be aware. "Derivative works" and "freedom of panorama", two such concepts, can be counter-intuitive and, as such, are a common cause of unintentional copyright violations.
Derivative works
A derivative work is a copy, translation or alteration of an existing work – for example, a scan of a page in a book or a picture of a stuffed animal. The Wikimedia Commons' derivative works guideline contains an example situation which explains the dilemma such images pose to Wikipedia:
By taking a picture with a copyrighted cartoon character on a t-shirt as its main subject, for example, the photographer creates a new, copyrighted work (the photograph), but the rights of the cartoon character's creator still affect the resulting photograph. Such a photograph could not be published without the consent of both copyright holders: the photographer and the cartoonist.
Wikipedians or external sources may believe in good faith that a scan, photograph, or screenshot that they have made is an entirely original work, thinking that, because they themselves made the scan or took the photograph, the resulting image is "self-made" and, thus, "free". This is not necessarily the case. Reviewers should consider whether the subject of the image is under copyright – a consideration independent of the copyright status of the image itself.[2]
Although not mandatory, derivative images will, ideally, have summaries identifying the copyright status of both the image and its subject. The image to the right, for example, contains a secondary copyright tag for the fountain/statue. In its case, the image as a whole is "free" and acceptable on Wikipedia, as the subject is demonstrably in the public domain. Alternatively, consider an image of a Batman action figure. Although the image itself could have any copyleft license, the image as a whole would still not be acceptable on Wikipedia, as the figure has not been published with a "free" license.
Freedom of panorama
Freedom of panorama is a copyright law provision that allows for photographs of works (e.g. buildings and sculptures) permanently installed in public places to be freely published, even if the works are still under copyright. Although such an image is still a derivative work (i.e. a translation of an existing work), it does not infringe the rights of the work's author in countries with freedom of panorama. In other countries, however, the derivative image requires consent of the subject's author to be freely licensed.
The United States does not have freedom of panorama, although pictures of buildings are exempt.[3] Hence "self-made" images of publicly-situated works in the United States require consent of the subject's author, as described above. This revision of an image depicting Jaume Piensa's Crown Fountain in Chicago, for example, is incorrectly tagged. As a photograph taken in a country without freedom of panorama (the USA), it would require the permission of the fountain's creator for it to be published with a CC or GFDL license.
Examples
Self-made
"Self made" images are generally those which are uploaded by their authors (i.e. Wikipedian-created images). In addition to checking for the policy-mandated elements, it is helpful to consider several aspects pertaining to provenance:
- Discrepancies: Does the image itself contradict the information available? For example, a car reported to have been photographed in Boston should raise questions if it has a European Union license plate.
- Metadata: Does the image contain metadata? Modern digital cameras tag images with camera type and other technical data. Images taken from websites rarely contain metadata.
- Resolution: Does the image have a reasonably high resolution? Modern digital cameras generally produce very high resolutions (for example, a 3.1 megapixel camera produces 2048×1536 pixel images). The more pixels an image has (the higher the resolution), the larger it is. Images used on web pages, therefore, often are low resolution, to reduce load time and to fit within the computer's screen resolution. Consequently, low resolution images (e.g. 300 x 200 pixels) claiming to be self-made should elicit additional scrutiny.
- Technical quality: Does the subject appear posed, to have been taken in a studio or possess other "professional" traits? Some Wikipedians are indeed professional photographers, but unusually high technical quality should elicit additional scrutiny.
- Telltales: Does the image have ominous visual cues? Images with watermarks or borders should raise red flags. Additionally, for example, scanned images may contain halftones, small dots which appear as the image is magnified (i.e. zoomed in upon). The presence of half-tones may indicate that the image is not the work of the uploader.
- User: Is the uploader an established Wikipedian or a "drive by" uploader with few or no other contributions. Always assume good faith, but remember that less established users may be unfamiliar with Wikipedia image policy.
Reviewing images requires common sense. Consideration of provenance is an art, not a science, and the above notes should not necessarily be used as a "checklist". Whereas any one of these considerations may be meaningless by itself, a combination of issues may bring the validity of an image into question. A talk page note to the uploader asking for clarification or a Google images search, for example, may be appropriate or necessary to be more confident that image is indeed "self-made".
Good image
The "self-made" image pictured to the right (as of this version) is in full compliance with Wikipedia policy and properly licensed.
- Is there a copyright tag? Yes, it asserts that Daniel Case has released the image as GFDL version 1.2.
- Is there a verifiable source? Yes, it asserts "self-made"; the uploader matches the author and a link to the author/uploader's profile is included.
- Is there an image summary (i.e. the "necessary details to support ... the image copyright tag")? Yes, the image has a complete {{information}} template.
- Does the provenance check out?
- The image is high resolution (1,929 x 1,284 pixels – on the image description page, look below the image itself or in the "Dimensions" field of the file history).
- The image contains camera metadata (on the image description page, under the metadata header).
- The image does not appear posed, to have been taken in a studio or possess other such "professional" traits which would raise red flags.
- The image is dated September 29, 2007 (i.e. well after the claimed license – GFDL version 1.2 – came into existence).
Flawed image
The "self-made" image pictured to the right (as of this version) is in not in compliance with Wikipedia image policy.
- Is there a copyright tag? Yes, it is using the {{GFDL-self}} copyright tag (note that, unlike the GFDL example above, this "self" variant begins with "I, the creator of this work").
- Is there a verifiable source? No, there is no explicit assertion of authorship, and, accordingly, no means of contacting the author.
- Is there an image summary (i.e. the "necessary details to support ... the image copyright tag")? No, the image only includes a description of the image's subject.
- The image summary is essentially non-existent and, consequently, lacks necessary details. The copyright tag implies the uploader is the "I" in the copyright tag, but explicit indication is needed. Compare with the information present in the example above.
- Does the provenance check out?
- The image is a mid-resolution (at 800 x 600 pixels, it is just under 0.5 megapixels). Although this is a higher resolution than most web images, it is lower than expected and is also a common computer screen resolution (i.e. what one might find at a computer wallpaper archive site).
- The image does not contain camera metadata.
The verifiable source and image summary elements can, in many "self-made" cases, be reasonably treated as one thing. The uploader (i.e. presumed author) would really only need to add a statement to the effect of "Author: J. Ash Bowie" to the summary to resolve the issue.
Already published
Already published images are those which have been obtained from external websites, published works or are otherwise not the authorship of the uploading Wikipedian. Provenance considerations for these images include:
- Anachronisms: Particularly relevant to images claiming PD due to age, does the image appear appropriate to its indicated time period? For example, a medieval illuminated manuscript or stained glass window should raise red flags if text therein is in English and not, for example, Latin.
- Date: Does the date seem reasonable relative to the subject? An image of the Empire State Building (completed in 1931), for example, should not claim a date of 1920.
- Licensor: Is the source reasonably expected to have licensing rights? Imagine, for example, a website dedicated to World War II era tanks containing vintage images of tanks in action and a general disclaimer that all information presented on the site is licensed as GFDL (i.e. "free"). An image from this site, uploaded to Wikipedia with a full summary and link to the disclaimer seems, prima facie, acceptable. Doesn't it seem implausible, however, that webmasters in the 21st century would have been photographing tanks in battle in the 1940s? Is it not odd that images taken in the 1940s would have a copyright license first released in 2000 (GFDL)? What is likely the case, in this scenario, is that the webmasters scanned the images, and believed the scans were theirs to license. This is not the case, as the scans would be considered "derivative works", as per above.
- Technical quality: As with "self made" images above, does the image have an expected technical quality? Professional images are not commonly published with free licenses; high technical quality and unusually good vantage points (e.g. when photographing celebrities) may raise red flags. Similarly, images claiming PD due to age are generally of inferior technical quality; "vintage" photographs are typically black and white or sepia, over-exposed and are less sharp than contemporary photographs.
Good image
The image pictured to the right (as of this version) is in full compliance with Wikipedia policy and properly licensed.
- Is there a copyright tag? Yes, it uses the {{PD-US}} copyright tag.
- Is there a verifiable source? Yes, a full citation of the published source from which the image originated has been provided.
- Is there an image summary (i.e. the "necessary details to support ... the image copyright tag")? Yes, the citation contains the publication date (1920), which supports the copyright tag's assertion of first publication before January 1, 1923.
- Does the provenance check out?
- The image has expected technical qualities. The image is black and white and generally appears to be old.
- The image has reasonable subject matter. Mackintosh and Spencer-Smith were indeed in Antarctica before 1920 (the reported publication date).
Flawed image
The image on the right (as of this version) is in not in compliance with Wikipedia image policy.
- Is there a copyright tag? Yes, it is using the {{PD-art}} copyright tag (claiming the image is in the public domain because the author has been dead more than 70 years).
- Is there a verifiable source? No, a source (e.g. web link or published source) has not been provided.
- Is there an image summary (i.e. the "necessary details to support ... the image copyright tag")? No, the information provided is not adequately supported. The names of the uploader and asserted author do not match, which indicates the image is not self-made and, thus, there exists an external (non-Wikipedia) source that needs to be cited.
- Without a source, we cannot confirm that the asserted author (Hans Holbein the Younger) is indeed the original author.
Although this is likely public domain, verifiability, not truth, is the threshold for inclusion. Without a source confirming the author, this image could just as easily be a contemporary work.
Common misconceptions
- Copyright subsistence: To reiterate a concept mentioned above, images with copyleft licenses are still under copyright. Retention of any right (e.g. the requirement of attribution) retains the copyright. An image is either copyrighted or in the public domain. There is no middle ground.
- Government hosting: Works of the federal government of the United States are not generally eligible for copyright. It is a common misconception, therefore, that an image on a federal website, or in a federal report, etc. is public domain. Such images should not be assumed to be public domain in the absence of explicit assertion of federal authorship or a general disclaimer that all images on the site or in the report, etc. are public domain. The FTC complaint against Movieland, for example, contains screenshots of copyrighted software. Although the FTC is a federal agency and the text of the report is public domain, the screenshots are derivative works to which the federal government does not have rights.
- Imprecise disclaimers: It is not uncommon for websites to contain disclaimers to the effect that "material herein is free for all to use", "images may be freely published", etc. Wikipedia uploaders, if unfamiliar with licensing or copyright, may select a GFDL, CC or {{Copyrighted free use}} copyright tag. These disclaimers are not acceptable, as the source has not fully articulated what "free" means (e.g., whether derivatives may be created).
- All licenses are not created equal: Copyright license variants and versions matter. Both CC and GFDL have version numbers (e.g. CC-by 2.0 or CC-by 3.0 and GFDL 1.1 or GFDL 1.2). Although the version number does not impact the image's acceptability on Wikipedia, they are indeed legally different and care should be taken to ensure that the correct version is reflected by the copyright tag. CC licenses, additionally, are particularly troublesome, as not all variants are "free". Wikipedia uploaders, if unfamiliar with CC nomenclature, sometimes upload, for example, an image licensed CC-by-NC 2.0 as CC-by-SA 2.0 because it seems "close enough"; it isn't. Per WP:IUP, "Images which are listed as for non-commercial use only, by permission, or which restrict derivatives are unsuitable for Wikipedia and will be deleted on sight."
- Creation is not publication: Sources often only provide the date a work was created. Creation is quite different from publication, which is "the distribution of copies or phonorecords of a work to the public by sale or other transfer of ownership, or by rental, lease, or lending".[4] Taking a photo and placing it in an album or hanging it on a wall, for example, is not publication. Producing a painting or sculpture is not publication. Using the photo or an image of the painting or sculpture in a publicly-distributed book, newspaper, journal, postcard, or other such medium is publication. For PD claims based on the date of first publication, the source needs to indicate the actual publication date.
Notes
- ^ WP:IUP: "U.S. law governs whether a Wikipedia image is in the public domain"
- ^ Copyright law contains a provision and exception for "article[s] having an intrinsic utilitarian function". A picture of a car or a chair, for example, would not be problematic. See the Commons guideline for elaboration.
- ^ 17 USC 120(a)
- ^ United States Copyright Office (2006). Copyright Office Basics. Retrieved August 1, 2008.
See also
Features and admins
Administrators
Two users were granted admin status via the Requests for Adminship process this week: WilliamH (nom) and Nev1 (nom).
Bots
Ten bots or bot tasks were approved to begin operating this week: AdminStatsBot (task request), ArkyBot (task request), Polbot (task request), Danielfolsom2 (task request), MelonBot (task request), MelonBot (task request), タチコマ robot (task request), DinoBot2 (task request), Erwin85Bot (task request), and Plasticbot (task request).
Featured pages
Four articles were promoted to featured status this week: Robert Sterling Yard (nom), Robert F. Kennedy assassination (nom), Greater Crested Tern (nom), and Proxima Centauri (nom).
Five lists were promoted to featured status last week: List of UEFA Cup winners (nom), List of Ontario birds (nom), 2008 WWE Draft (nom), List of Nine Inch Nails awards (nom), and NBA All-Defensive Team (nom).
Two topics were promoted to featured status this week: State touring routes in Warren County, New York (nom) and Smallville (season 1) (nom).
No portals were promoted to featured status this week.
The following featured articles were displayed this week on the Main Page as Today's featured article: Ann Arbor, Michigan, William Wilberforce, History of timekeeping devices, Yao Ming, PowerBook 100, Matthew Brettingham, and Parapsychology.
Former featured pages
No articles were delisted this week.
No lists were delisted this week.
No topics were delisted this week.
Featured media
The following featured pictures were displayed this week on the Main Page as picture of the day: Felbrigge Psalter, Khonds, Vietnam Veterans Memorial blueprint, The Spinning Dancer, Paris, Pasture Day Moth, and Flowers of the Asteraceae family.
Two sounds were featured this week: The Lost Chord (nom) and Israel in Egypt (nom)
No featured pictures were demoted this week.
Six pictures were promoted to featured status this week and are shown below.
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Reindeer sled
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Incandescent light bulb patent
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Nymphaea species
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Along the River During the Qingming Festival from 18th century Qing Dynasty
Bugs, Repairs, and Internal Operational News
This is a summary of recent technology and site configuration changes that affect the English Wikipedia. Note that not all changes described here are necessarily live as of press time; the English Wikipedia is currently running version 1.44.0-wmf.4 (a8dd895), and changes to the software with a version number higher than that will not yet be active. Configuration changes and changes to interface messages, however, become active immediately.
Fixed bugs
- Administrators are no longer shown CAPTCHAs when creating accounts for other users. (r38796, bug 12142)
- Shared IPs (those on the autoblock whitelist) are no longer blocked automatically by the Torblock extension. (r38853, bug 14934)
- Redlinks are no longer erroneously marked with the "stub" class (used for links to short articles if a stub threshold has been set in the user's preferences). (r38980, bug 15091)
- Redirects no longer allow unrelated text between the #REDIRECT and the link to the page being redirected to. (r38737, bug 15053)
- Special:Export via category now works even if the Category: prefix is given at the start of the category name. (r39184, bug 14790)
New features
- The .ogv extension is now permitted on uploaded files, as an alternative to .ogg (they refer to the same video format Ogg Theora, but .ogg is also commonly used for Ogg Vorbis sound files). (r35978, bug 14315)
- It's now possible to query the API to find out how many titles (or values of some other multivalue parameter) are simultaneously accepted in an API query. (r38639, bug 15048)
- A new requestid= API parameter can be given to any API request; it is simply repeated back to the user requesting the query in the query output, to help distinguish requests. (r38638, bug 15044)
- A new interface message MediaWiki:Pagetitle-view-mainpage can be set to change the HTML <title> of the main page (regardless of whether it is at Main Page or some other location). (r38730, bug 15007)
- Special:Contributions now displays the name of the user for whom contributions are being checked in the HTML <title> of the page. (r38795, bug 14921)
- CSS classes ns-talk and ns-subject have been added to distinguish talk pages from non-talk pages (r39054, bug 15079); also, CSS classes have been added to show what skin is being used to show the page (r39058, bug 15052).
- It is now possible for administrators to place information which will be shown on the edit page for a particular page, by modifying specially-named interface messages. (r39121, bug 15102). For example, MediaWiki:Editnotice-0 will appear when editing any page in article space, and MediaWiki:Editnotice-0-Main_Page will appear when editing the Main Page.
Configuration changes
- Wikipedia:Changing username and its subpages are now excluded via robots.txt, and thus will not show up in search engines. (bug 14793 )
Other technology news
- A large variety of page moves were blocked accidentally for a while due to a Wikipedia administrator misconfiguring an anti-vandalism feature recently; this has now been fixed.
Ongoing news
- Internationalisation has been continuing as normal; help is always appreciated! See mw:Localisation statistics for how complete the translations of languages you know are, and post any updates to bugzilla or use Betawiki.
The Report on Lengthy Litigation
The Arbitration Committee opened one new case this week, and did not close any cases, leaving four currently open. There is also a motion open on a previous case.
Motion
- A motion is open in the Privatemusings case, which was originally closed in December 2007. If approved, Remedy 2, which restricted Privatemusings from editing articles related to biographies of living persons, would be removed. In its place, Privatemusings would be put under the mentorship of Lar, Jayvdb and Durova; this mentorship would be solely regarding the editing of biographies of living persons. If no issues arise, the mentorship would lapse 90 days after its inception. At present, five arbitrators support the motion, and none oppose it (the support of eight is necessary to adopt the motion).
New case
- Alastair Haines: A case involving Alastair Haines and other users.
Evidence phase
- SlimVirgin-Lar: A case brought by Thatcher, asking the committee to review the use of checkuser by Lar, in the light of comments by SlimVirgin (here, inter alia), alleging that he misused the tool. Evidence is to be submitted privately to the committee by e-mail, and voting will presumably occur privately as well.
Voting phase
- Geogre-William M. Connolley: A case involving wheel warring between Geogre and William M. Connolley. William M. Connolley inappropriately extended a block on Giano II, while Geogre inappropriately reversed the block, and reversed page protection on Giano's talk page. The case is currently in the voting phase; proposed remedies include:
- Four different versions of a remedy modifying or removing remedy 2.2 in IRC. All versions are supported by four to five arbitrators, and opposed by three to four arbitrators.
- Currently passing is a remedy prohibiting Geogre and Connolley from taking any administrative action with respect to Giano II. There is also an injunction in effect prohibiting blocks or unblocks of Giano without the consent of a committee member.
Motion to close
- C68-FM-SV: A case involving disputes between Cla68, FeloniousMonk, SlimVirgin, JzG, and others. The case, which has seen little-to-no public input from arbitrators, is currently subject to a motion to dismiss, with the support of one arbitrator, and the opposition of one.