Hi All,
I'll better explain the whole story... our situation is:
1) after getting some nice media exposure traffic started to rise (about 5
published articles since March, 27; 2 of them on national media)
2) people do register, but actually 90% of what we get is from anon users,
from the grammar mistakes they usually make I'd say it's at least 4 main
contributors working almost every day, but all efforts to contact them have
proved unsuccesful this far
Now, I get the impression that a number of papers could use us as a free
source for some kind "Not everybody knows that..." section of their papers.
This would:
1) get a permanent exposure to the wiki
2) increase wiki's authorithy as a public data source
3) get people in touch with the written form of their language.
The main contribution waves came exactly when important media published pms
text quoted from the wiki, so it seems to make sense to work on this. Most
people are not familiar both with reading and writing the language and with
the very concept of a wiki. By acquiring some stable presence in the paper
media we could use the trend that is manifesting itself on spontaneous
basis.
It's not a problem to have a small copyright related text published in small
chars, from our marketing POV we'd want the wiki URL published in bigger
chars. Please bear in mind that given the current trend we'll have NO way to
contact 90% of the authors.
От: "Andre Engels" <andreengels(a)gmail.com>
This article is an adaptation from the Wikipedia
article "Nonsense",
which can be found at
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Nonsense. It falls
under the GNU Free Documentation License, which means that it can be
copied and distributed by anyone in modified in modified or unmodified
form as long as the new publication is under the same license. See
http://www.gnu.org/copyleft/fdl.html for the text of the license. A
copy of this article can be found on our website at
http://www.somenewspaper.com/article/08-11/fromwikipedia.htm.
Newspapers will need a much shorter text, IMHO. We are going to stand
somewhere in the "local chronicle" page, sometimes in the "Culture"
section,
we cannot really expect them to waste this much room. What about writing:
"The original text is published at
http://pms.wikipedia.org/wiki/article and
released under a GNU Free Documentation License. Details can be obtained at
http://pms.wikipedia.org/Wikipedia/GNUFDL "
At this point we would use a template to point readers of the original
article to a machine readable copy inside the wiki, in a special namespace
(say Printed_Articles:), where one could know who published what and were.
If it seems to make sense to the people here I'll try my luck in asking the
board to issue an official authorisation for this use.
Thanks
Bèrto
PS I suggest to all minor language edition to try this marketing trick. And
the smaller and more local the paper mentioning you, the more contributors
you seem to get. Just make sure that text gets published in the same
language as the original.
----- Исходное сообщение -----
От: "Sabine Cretella" <sabine_cretella(a)yahoo.it>
Кому: <wikipedia-l(a)Wikimedia.org>
Отправлено: 12 июля 2006 г. 14:45
Тема: Re: [Wikipedia-l] Marketing: a question
Hi Berto,
consider that it is less of a problem when the authors are for example
three/four you know. If you all agree to publish that specific article
under another license (for example cc-by) you can do that - this means:
each author can publish the own work under various licenses.
Small wikipedias like us (pms, nap, lmo etc.) have less problems in that
way - it is enough that you take the article, contact all contributors
(of course anonymous contributors cannot be contacted ... don't really
know how to deal with that one) and have them state that the article may
be used under license xyz for the publication in newspaper abc. Creative
Commons licenses are somewhat better ... you do not have to include the
whole text of a license there.
Another possibility for us small wikipedias who want to go that way is:
ask contributors to state that they would agree to a double-licensing
(for example cc-by) of their work. I suppose most of us will gladly do
that, because we want to spread the information and not close it down in
an electronical format.
Ciao, Sabine
Berto schrieb:
> Hi!
>
> can a newspaper publish an article from a wiki, provided that they quote
the
> source page? I am thinking to propose this to a
number of small local
> newspapers, but I am not clear on the copyright matter, since these
> newspapers are actually sold. Obviously, it would be just an article,
the
> paper is 99,5% made of their own stuff. It would
do great to get a
better
media
exposure.
Bèrto
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