[Foundation-l] Re: Copyright complaints
Robert Scott Horning
robert_horning at netzero.net
Sun Feb 12 17:26:23 UTC 2006
Ray Saintonge wrote:
> Kim Bruning wrote:
>
>> On Sat, Feb 11, 2006 at 12:12:53PM -0800, Michael Snow wrote:
>>
>>> For copyright infringements where we have an actual complaint by an
>>> affected party, (...)
>>>
>>
>> The problem is where there is no such complaint as yet, or where
>> people incorrectly claim "fair use" in an attempt to escape
>> deletion.
>
> It presumes bad faith to say that they claim fair use to escape deletion.
>
> Presuming good faith would put a motivation to improve the article first.
>
> How do you distinguish between a "correct" and an "incorrect" fair use
> claim.
>
> Ec
>
You have to use both context and quantity of usage for justification.
Clearly it is better to obtain permission than to simply claim
fair-use, and the bigger issue is really just fair use images. Fair-use
text can be distinguished mainly as a short quote or merely used in
reference, and the bulk of a page can't be fair-use from a single
source. For both text and images courts do use how the content is
competing against the original product (book, magazine, newspaper), with
distribution formats that differ widely to be given a larger degree of
lattitude. Reproducing a newspaper article in a book has been found to
be legal by some courts, for instance. I wouldn't rely on that as
ironclad protection, however, and it is a very grey area I would
recommend that we stay away from on Wikimedia projects.
As general project policy regarding fair use, I think it is best to not
just stay strictly within the law, but steer clear of legal grey areas
where possible that could still get our projects in trouble. With the
extra trouble of trying to even find what might be fair-use, I
completely understand projects like Commons that simply don't even want
to allow it at all. Wikibooks doesn't even have a fair use policy yet,
but this is perhaps something we need to consider on that project.
Obviously Wikipedia opened a can of worms to even allow fair use at all.
--
Robert Scott Horning
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