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November 13
Long-term disputes on various wikis involving a cross-wiki IP author
There are numerous disputes involving an IP user indulging in cross-wiki spam, particularly articles on West Germanic varieties. I am hounded for a while.
From what I can see, he's a user who upload much about mapping and cartography, for which is great, but to engage in further conversation with German Low, or etztes with or without a s, Low Saxon with Low German to Low German only, for me all this and the on-going conversation, does not contribute to anything positive. Germanic lang have much variation, as well as French or Latin, especially from those area. You could simply add a variant, or suggest that it might be spelled with a different phonetic sounds. I did review quite a few contribution he made, and this could be solve quickly. In my opinion he is contributing for which is great, if you are trying to bring post back from 2003... It seems like he is using the same account, and he will keep using it since he's in love with the appreciation of contribution... I suggest to close this topic for now and simply add a watch alert.
@Sarcelles: Is this some sort of request for administrative action? If so, it belongs on the appropriate Administrators' noticeboard, not on the Village pump. Conversely, if it is something you are just bringing up for general discussion, I don't know what you want discussed. - Jmabel ! talk18:37, 13 November 2024 (UTC)[reply]
None of these accounts have edited in recent weeks, some not in as long as half a year, so it is hard to imagine what anyone can do about this at this point. - Jmabel ! talk18:40, 13 November 2024 (UTC)[reply]
It can be anticipated, that this author continues to be active on several wikis including Commons. I think this is a good place to discuss this cross-wiki spam. On en.wiktionary I have been removing numerous typical edits by this user. Sarcelles (talk) 14:29, 16 November 2024 (UTC)[reply]
File:Niederfränkisch.png is a file of this kind. It attempts to picture Low Franconian varieties in Europe. It has the following threefold-division:
A minor transitional area to Low Saxon, in the Netherlands
East Bergish running from near the city centre of Essen to Westphalia, also quite small#
A somehow larger area cutting through all of the following: an arrondissement bordering to Brussels, Antwerp province, Dutch Limburg, Belgian Limburg, Duisburg, Düsseldorf, Wuppertal, German-speaking Belgium and French-speaking Belgium.
This is called Nordniederfränkisch (North Low Franconian) and running from France to Holland, Friesland province, Brussels and Westphalia. Sarcelles (talk) 11:45, 22 November 2024 (UTC)[reply]
Dialects of Dutch and German This is a typical German map of some of the dialects from Italy to Denmark. The author is MicBy67, User:Postmann Michael (The discussion creator's blatant and deliberate lie has been corrected! The map creator was not the Commons accounts mentioned, but the account User:Et Mikkel~commonswiki! Let's stick to the truth for once! --MicBy67 (talk) 02:34, 7 December 2024 (UTC)). There should be a further discussion of this issue. Sarcelles (talk) 20:07, 5 December 2024 (UTC)[reply]
Yawn!
Cook up a fresh idea! ;)
Hey, did you happen to catch the latest post on the discussion page? Just checking!
@MicBy67: consider yourself formally warned that the wording of your posts here has been unnecessarily uncivil, and continuing in this vein will probably result in me (or someone else) blocking you. - Jmabel ! talk17:53, 6 December 2024 (UTC)[reply]
@Jmabel: I take note of that. And I'm aware that the discussion creator (or his mentor) will bring up the old story again with the original account (Postmann Michael) was blocked on the German-speaking Wikipedia because of POV from dubious sources, trivialization of National Socialism. Harmful to Wikipedia on the one hand, and with the successor account (Et Mikkel) was permanently blocked on the German-speaking Wikipedia as a way to circumvent the blocking on the other hand.
Nobody really cares about the past two decades anymore!
What is striking, however, is the fact that the discussion creator is trying to construct a connection between the IP's and me. And is cross-wiki hounding actually allowed on Wikimedia Commons? I am asking now for an interested friend … --MicBy67 (talk) 02:55, 7 December 2024 (UTC)[reply]
Are the accounts I allegedly attacked just one that launched a smear campaign against me, to which I responded sarcastically? By the way, this is irrelevant to Wikimedia Commons!
I doubt the identity of the account stated. And that is my right.
You were for yourself banned from the German-speaking Wikipedia for years because of “pointless article work,” right?
Do you haven't anything better to do than try to link my account to the Paderborn IPs in all Wikimedia/Wikipedia projects?
Sarcelles has a history at Dutch Wikipedia of dropping questions about dialects and languages and their boundaries, aimed at construing one opinion as being the truth and falling silent when objections arise. Even so one day before arrival of the archive bot he used to add a random remark to avoid archiving so I took to manually archiving his messages or scrapping them altogether. Also I often alert unsuspecting users to this behavior implying that answering is pointless.
Although Sarcelles poses no acute threat to the wikis, I would be relieved if he could be banned for good from all projects. These tedious and time-consuming discussions lead nowhere, least of all to our prime objective. His minor contributions in the main space do not in any way compensate for the inconvenience.
Hello, so I wanted to share some proposed changes to Tmbox that would harmonise it with mbox. This would be useful when we decide to migrate Mbox to Module:Message box. Due to the unfortunate way templatestlyes works, I can't show changes side-by-side, but here's the changes with old Tmbox and my version. With the old version, there is quite a bad contrast with mbox since one has an inline border but one doesn't, which is especially noticed on talk pages, but my version fixes that. Also, it synchronises the colours with mbox with design tokens. —Matrix(!)ping onewhen replying {user - talk? - uselesscontributions} 19:17, 29 November 2024 (UTC)[reply]
Commons:What is this? (Get help with file categorization)
This is a new page intended to become a place where users can ask about what is shown in an image/video so that fitting categories can be added or for people knowledgable about a subject to add requested fitting categories:
I created it due to recurring posts on this page asking about what individual pictures show where having a separate page could make this page here more focused on project-wide issues and all of the remaining discussions. It could become more overseeable (shorter) as well as to enable users (only or especially) interested in such requests to have a separate dedicated page they can watch.
Requests that for some time remain unsolved there could be asked about here in a brief post that bundles several requests. These could look like the photo challenge results posts.
If you're interested in these kinds of requests, please watch that page. It probably won't work well early on for some time but that may change over time. If you have any media files where you think a category is missing and you'd like to know which, just create a new section on that page. There also probably is a better name for that page, I'll try to think of a better one and if you have any suggestions please name them. Prototyperspective (talk) 09:59, 4 December 2024 (UTC)[reply]
1 The lack of such a place. 2 This place being overcrowded. 3 Insufficient resources for the large backlog & open VP issues/discussions. 4 Files missing categories and missing categories for files. Prototyperspective (talk) 10:57, 4 December 2024 (UTC)[reply]
The main problem of Village Pump, as I see it is that Proto closes threads they don't seem to fully understand while hiding in edit summaries that they are closing such threads and then complain when knowledgeable people reopen them, bloating these threads with meta discussions about the threads. ∞∞ Enhancing999 (talk) 08:23, 5 December 2024 (UTC)[reply]
I like the idea, but it needs to be properly advertised. Perhaps the MediaWiki Upload Wizard could include a line like "If you don't know what categories you should use you can ask experienced users" or something like that. The main issue is that a lot of power users don't even know where things are, for example I know a good map maker who didn't know about the Maps Workshop. Another example is how the Wikimedia Foundation (WMF) "hides" are their projects and places by not putting it in a highly visible navigational template. For this page to be successful, it should be advertised in the help desk, community navigational templates, and the MediaWiki Upload Wizard. --Donald Trung 『徵國單』 (No Fake News 💬) (WikiProject Numismatics 💴) (Articles 📚) 21:04, 4 December 2024 (UTC)[reply]
Makes sense but linking it anywhere at the Upload Wizard would be a wrong place for this. It's meant for experienced editors who would like to find out a fitting category for some media, particularly:
if they think it's too important to identify what is shown and categorize it than to just dump it somewhere into Category:Unidentified subjects
It's best to describe what is unidentified as that there may not be an unindentifed xyz category for it or because it's briefly described somewhat unclear what is unidentified
It's best to describe what is unidentified as one can use multiple examples and can use some text to describe it
for example I know a good map maker who didn't know about the Maps Workshop I find aggreggating everything into a category useful for such purposes (at best also an overview page using that) and I've created Category:Wikimedia projects and maps regarding that example.
The current way people would find this page is via Category:Unidentified subjects. I again recommend people to watchlist it. People could also learn about the place if it's linked from some relevant template (is there any?) or if unsolved requests are bundled into a VP post that links to the page. Another name for it may be better, one doesn't necessarily have to be an expert in the subject to be able to help out, it's like connecting people who are sufficiently knowledgable in some area to identify/characterize something with people requesting such info. Maybe Commons:Category identification requests or something like that. Prototyperspective (talk) 15:02, 15 December 2024 (UTC)[reply]
Support I don't know why, but from what I've seen there's some pretty obtuse category trees on here having to do with Germany. Way more so then with other countries for some reason. This category structure being an especially horrible example of the wider problem. So I say delete it. --Adamant1 (talk) 12:10, 6 December 2024 (UTC)[reply]
Unfortunately this happens not only for forests, but for any object that may be categorized by several variables. For example, in football matches we have at least something like this for only THREE variables (one of which is a "children" (club of country) of another, so closer to 2.5). It is even worse in reality, as e.g. cities or stadiums aren't counted here.
Matches by year by country Matches by country by year Matches by year by club Matches by club by year Matches by club by country Matches in N [year] Matches in N [year] by country Matches in N [year] by club Matches in N [year] by date ("shallow" category — i.e. one that is used to view all of recursive items of a category) Matches in N [country] Matches in N [country] by year Matches in N [country] by club Matches in N [country] by date ("shallow") Matches in N [country] in N [year] Matches in N [country] in N [year] by club Matches in N [country] in N [year] by date ("shallow") Matches of N club Matches of N club by year Matches of N club by date ("shallow") Matches of N club in N year Matches of N club in N year by date ("shallow")
That's largely due to the whole "Double meta categories" thing. Although like everything on here there's a right way and a wrong way to go about it. This being an example of the wrong way. but ultimately "Double meta categories" should just be axed if people don't want weird category trees like these ones to be created in the first place. --Adamant1 (talk) 12:15, 6 December 2024 (UTC)[reply]
Category:Double meta categories or "three subject categories" I guess. If I'm correct all the categories you listed would be double meta cats. The same goes for something like Category:Forests by city by season and it's subcats. Forests=subject 1, city=subject 2, season=subject 3. Or one main category and 2 meta cats? I don't know but I'm sure you get it. Either way cross sectional categories should only have two subjects at most. Really, even that can be over kill sometimes. --Adamant1 (talk) 12:24, 6 December 2024 (UTC)[reply]
So, do you think it should ideally be closer to something like this?
Matches by year by country Matches by country by year Matches by year by club Matches by club by year Matches by club by country Matches in N [year] (functioning as both normal category and shallow) Matches in N [year] by country Matches in N [year] by club Matches in N [country] (normal & shallow) Matches in N [country] by year Matches in N [country] by club Matches in N [country] in N [year] (normal & shallow) Matches of N club (normal & shallow) Matches of N club by year Matches of N club in N year (normal & shallow)
Myself I don't really see a difference between "Association football matches by club" and "Matches of association football clubs" so I'd remove the second in favor of the first (and the unification). I agree though that there is no need of a category when there is just one item and categorization by club is in most cases an example of this. So maybe something like this?
Matches by year by country Matches by country by year Matches by year by club Matches by club by year Matches by club by country Matches in N [year] (functioning as both normal category and shallow) Matches in N [year] by country Matches in N [year] by club Matches in N [country] (normal & shallow) Matches in N [country] by year Matches in N [country] by club Matches in N [country] in N [year] (normal & shallow) Matches of N club
I'm not sure why I am being pinged here; I am not involved nor interested in this, and the creator who agreed above is an administrator themself, so I don't think there would be an issue for them to delete their own creations if there is consensus for that. 𝟙𝟤𝟯𝟺𝐪𝑤𝒆𝓇𝟷𝟮𝟥𝟜𝓺𝔴𝕖𝖗𝟰 (𝗍𝗮𝘭𝙠) 10:49, 11 December 2024 (UTC)[reply]
I created a mass deletion request but I haven't submitted it yet. I feel bad for the author and their efforts. I'd appreciate any feedback. -Slevinski (talk) 19:21, 6 December 2024 (UTC)[reply]
Yes. It's a large number, but I don't see the benefit and I see actual harm. In the least, the facial diacritic section needs fixed for characters U+1DA00 to U+1DA6C. I provided feedback on one of the facial diacritic images talk page. Either include the head anchor character U+1D9FF, or include the dotted head placeholder in the image. The Noto SignWriting font is still in development and not production ready. The images in the category are not final, but a work in progress that will need to be updated later or left in a unfinished state. The shaping reports from GitHub shows 50% for Noto SignWriting. Why use static images of a development snapshot?
@Slevinski: I'm not sure I follow your reasoning. Are you simply saying that this isn't a good enough font, and we shouldn't document it? Or that these files do not accurately document the font? Or something else? - Jmabel ! talk22:17, 6 December 2024 (UTC)[reply]
Thanks Jeff for pinging. I see notability in the following two reasons: 1. The Noto font family is a widely used one created by Google. It is notable because of the huge amount of glyphs and the goal to provide a glyph for every Unicode character. 2. The Sign Writing language is one of the main communication techniques, especially in the non-verbal purposes. The SVG file makes it freely scalable and the extraction easier to only get the desired sign. I wonder if the glyphs are that wrong in total. In case the glyphs here get outdated, we either have the option to import the newer ones and delete the old ones or move the old ones in a cat for deprecated glyphs. But I think at least the fact it is part of the Noto font family which has its own Wikipedia article should be relevant. If we have really big problems in accuracy or other issues, then this could be put in a broader discussion. Generally I try to cover fonts that are significant enough to have its own article or illustrate a special art of style like ornamented fonts, isometric fonts or 3D style fonts to illustrate the possible amount of variants that can be put into the styling. Greetings --PantheraLeo1359531 😺 (talk) 10:38, 7 December 2024 (UTC)[reply]
Noto SignWriting is a useful font, and I support using it with CSS and the font file for flexibility and accuracy. However, I have concerns about creating new static files documenting its glyphs due to ongoing issues. The font remains unfinished, with about 200 new errors identified this past week. These errors affect around 200 files on platforms like Commons and Wikipedia, causing inconsistencies. There is no clear way to notify users about these problems. Recent discussions are available on Gitter, and the issues will be tracked on the Noto SignWriting GitHub issues list.
A few examples of problematic files on Wikipedia and Commons:
U+1D835: 90 files use an incorrect glyph, displaying a thumb handshape instead of the correct glyph.
U+1D86F: 96 files on Commons and Wikipedia display an impossible handshape with two thumbs, contradicting the correct glyph with a single thumb on the outside.
Additionally, the 108 characters in the range U+1DA00 to U+1DA6C are facial diacritics, and over 1,000 files on Wikimedia Commons fail to follow the Unicode standard for these characters. This issue affects both the names and the images of these files. Correcting these files to follow the facial diacritic rules for SignWriting in Unicode 8 (uni8) characters is possible, but it would require significant effort and understanding the complexities involved.
In summary:
The unresolved inaccuracies of the font are propagating errors across Wikimedia projects.
Extensive maintenance is required to address existing issues, update files, and manage future changes.
While I agree that the Noto SignWriting font is notable, I do not consider it educational or a good idea to document with static files given the font's ongoing issues. -Slevinski (talk) 19:21, 13 December 2024 (UTC)[reply]
Hi, swetrails.com has many images uploaded by a particular user with CC-BY 4.0 (example)- so far so nice and good. On the page, the license is shown as a text overlay on each image but not embedded in the image. I uploaded several of those images with appropriate license information etc. to wikimedia commons. Per chance, over last weekend, the swetrails.com server was not accessible, which made me think, what actually would happend if the server were taken down for good and the copyright owner then denied they ever granted the CC-BY 4.0 license? There is also no contact information anywhere on the site, neither as Imprint nor for the particular contributor. Since nothing is embedded in the original image, it would not be possible to prove that the license was indeed granted at some point in time. How would Wikimedia handle such a case?
--Uli@wiki (talk) 12:10, 10 December 2024 (UTC)[reply]
It's not really clear to me how you could do it on swetrails.com, but sometimes people will save a copy of the page to the Wayback Machine and use it as the source. Otherwise you can just ignore it since they don't really care about dead links on here to begin with. We aren't as dependent on external sources as a project like Wikipedia would be and their pretty lax about them to. So it's probably a none issue as long as you provide a source to begin with. --Adamant1 (talk) 12:19, 10 December 2024 (UTC)[reply]
Leaving a note in case anyone is interested. WordPress.org now has a photo directory of CC0 1.0 licensed images that anyone can contribute to. It might be worth importing those images here for reuse within our projects. Ckoerner (talk) 23:02, 11 December 2024 (UTC)[reply]
Very interesting, thanks for letting people know. Seems like they have many files and also lots of metadata per file. Thus, I think some kind of importer tool or import-programme would be best similar to the bots that import from flickr. Would be good if somebody could set it up, it would need to check whether the file has already been uploaded here. Prototyperspective (talk) 11:40, 12 December 2024 (UTC)[reply]
Sadly, though, usually no geographic data, which makes it more a "stock photo" site than one that can be used to illustrate specific subjects. Also, makes Freedom of Panorama issues very thorny. - Jmabel ! talk20:55, 12 December 2024 (UTC)[reply]
If the photo is showing a place – and not all of the images are photos that show places – the info where it is is usually in the file description. They do contain exif data but I couldn't find any image with location exif data so maybe that's not included. They can still be used to illustrate all sorts of subjects, I think usually photos of places is the kind of files there already is a lot of on WMC so there it would be more unlikely that the file would fill any gaps which is not the case for various objects and abstract subjects. Prototyperspective (talk) 22:01, 12 December 2024 (UTC)[reply]
Still: out of the first few dozen photos there right now, here are a few that would be problematic on that basis: [1], [2], [3], [4]; a few more could imaginably have similar issues. So if we do bot-import the lot, someone had better plan on doing some checking. - Jmabel ! talk22:40, 12 December 2024 (UTC)[reply]
Disagree. No. 3 might be de minimis, but it doesn't look to me like an open-and-shut case. In many countries the structure in No. 4 would be eligible for copyright, just like a bridge. - Jmabel ! talk19:27, 13 December 2024 (UTC)[reply]
December 12
Category "Glass sarcophagi"
Some time ago I created the Glass sarcophagi category, but it doesn't seem very correct to me.
Perhaps one of the terms is more correct, like: "reliquary tombs", "funerary urns", "Christ's tombs" "encased effigies", all under the category "glass coffins".
Of course, it can be differentiate depending on content, namely:
Not that it's relevant to the discussion at hand, but out of curiosity: what would then be the defining trait? I assume we wouldn't call a wooden coffin a "sarcophagus". - Jmabel ! talk05:49, 13 December 2024 (UTC)[reply]
I'm not entirely sure, but it seems to be a coffin that's displayed above-ground. To be honest though prior to yesterday I only ever heard the phrase used in the context of ancient Egypt. I didn't know it was a type of coffin that's used in other cultures and that's still in use today. ReneeWrites (talk) 21:48, 13 December 2024 (UTC)[reply]
"Glass coffins" seems to be the broader and more accurate category for all these images (and it's odd to me that that parent category doesn't exist, but this one does). I would move the images up and subcategorize from there as you start getting more images of a specific type, but currently I don't think this category is so full that it's in high need of further subcategorizing. ReneeWrites (talk) 00:13, 13 December 2024 (UTC)[reply]
The VRT is a voluntary team that handles emails with copyright issues but also permissions. If the team gets permission for the use of Roblox screenshots here, then it would be possible --PantheraLeo1359531 😺 (talk) 08:50, 13 December 2024 (UTC)[reply]
It contains many empty categories so those are misleading numbers. Somebody should delete these but manually it would take too much time. Also there's categories like "!PAUS3" which aren't the name of the person. Prototyperspective (talk) 11:11, 13 December 2024 (UTC)[reply]
Hi, I'm User:OperationSakura6144. I've been working for a while on clearing Category:Miscellaneous non-vector files with vector versions available, which is a category I've created to keep some non-vector files, other than the Japanese municipal flags/emblems, which is my main expertise and interest, that need to be replaced by their available vector versions. The work I'm doing there is tedious and impossible for me to complete, and I also need to focus on my studies and school assignments. So, I'm leaving the work of maintaining and clearing the category to you. I'll come back to see the status of the category after my school work. Until then, I'm taking a temporary break from Commons. Hope I see you later. OperationSakura6144 (talk) 04:46, 14 December 2024 (UTC)[reply]
This file was uploaded by a user who has uploaded several football logos while claiming to be their original author, a highly unlikely claim that has led to all of them going up for deletion. However, this one should be able to stay as it is mere shapes and letters. How do I change the licencing from the false claims of authorship by the original uploader? Every time I try to change it, I get blocked by an edit filter. Unknown Temptation (talk) 18:20, 14 December 2024 (UTC)[reply]
A user maintains that this image is to be added to the photo challenge called "Footprints" about footprints, hoofprint, pawprint, etc. It shows marks in sand by a dry blade of grass. Do you think this image is within the scope of this challenge and should not be removed? Please also consider other challenges and the other participants / submissions, thank you. --Prototyperspective (talk) 20:17, 14 December 2024 (UTC)[reply]
It's not something I would submit myself to this challenge (the specific term for this is a scratch circle or pseudotrace, see Category:Partial scratch circles (pseudotraces) in sand) but whether I would have it removed depends on other factors as well, like the general consensus among participants or the broader goal of the challenge itself. I don't see much harm in people thinking a bit further outside of the box than I would for a competition with comparatively low stakes as the monthly photography challenge here on Commons. ReneeWrites (talk) 21:11, 14 December 2024 (UTC)[reply]
I think thinking outside the box and submitting things to challenges that are at the fringes of its scope are great things. I think neither of this is the case here. I don't see much harm in Just to note, I didn't say that I would think it's harmful if these challenges don't remain ontopic and not get frequently flooded with unrelated images. Prototyperspective (talk) 21:37, 14 December 2024 (UTC)[reply]
Also removed: Craters around entrances to an ant nest You're not helping anybody by unfairly letting people submit unrelated images to challenges. Maybe you want to be friendly but you're just harming the project, the challenge, and other participants. I suggest we also stop deleting any images, because we'd like to be nice and friendly and nobody would ever intentionally upload something problematic right.
It's not fair competition and deteriorates the quality of the challenges, confuses people, etc. The image on the side is also unrelated, it does not show any footprint. It's fine to include these images in a challenge but then don't name it Footprints and have the info that it's about footprints when it's actually anything. This just highlights how unfit the photo challenges are for being linked from the very frontpage. Prototyperspective (talk) 12:34, 15 December 2024 (UTC)[reply]
December 15
AI upscaled paintings as valued images
Hello,
Someone contacted VRT a month ago to warn us about this user uploading questionable AI upscales of paintings and other artworks.
One was nominated for deletion, but there are hundreds others and the user nominated them as valued images (and of course replaced the original image on all Wikipedias).
You should also ping User:Archaeodontosaurus. He is a longtime and extremely productive and active user, and it's not appropriate to talk behind his back. We're going to have to discuss AI images going forward, and as they get better, the issues around them will get trickier. -- Ikan Kekek (talk) 08:42, 15 December 2024 (UTC)[reply]
Thanks for pinging him. It looks like we're working toward a consensus. I agree with the concerns expressed below, but I have to wonder whether we'll even recognize AI in a few years, and that's when problems of accuracy and authorship will become critical and possibly irresolvable. -- Ikan Kekek (talk) 12:52, 15 December 2024 (UTC)[reply]
Part of what bothers me about these images is that they're all being uploaded without any disclosure that they've been AI upscaled, and without making the original image available. The Fra'Mauro map is a great example - the original would have been a great image; the upscaled version is a mess. And I'm worried that a lot of the other upscaled images may have hidden issues as well. Omphalographer (talk) 08:50, 15 December 2024 (UTC)[reply]
I wondered if the upscaling might be occurring in-camera without the uploader being aware that this was happening, but from the EXIF they're using a Nikon D850 from 2017, which I guess rules that out. Belbury (talk) 10:14, 15 December 2024 (UTC)[reply]
Comment I am very open to discussion. Making AI takes me a lot of time. It is difficult and the results are questionable. We must explore this path, it is a tool, we must learn.
I understand the reluctance.
We could find a simple solution: I propose that there be a label to be placed on the images saying whether there was an AI intervention or not.
Could one tell me a reasonable use case for AI upscaled raster images that falls in our scope (beyond demonstrating the technique)? {{AI upscaled}} words it this way: "This process may have introduced inaccurate, speculative details not present in the original picture." I think that any media that relies on details to be understood (portraits, maps, biological organisms, depictions of machines and mechanics...) should not be processed in a way that introduces "inaccurate, speculative details". That would be kind of "alternative facts" that I would not welcome. Regards, Grand-Duc (talk) 09:36, 15 December 2024 (UTC)[reply]
Putting aside the scope and accuracy issues, why even bother upscaling a portrait to begin with? Because I really don't see the benefit of it regardless of if AI upscaled images are accurate or in scope anyway. --Adamant1 (talk) 10:14, 15 December 2024 (UTC)[reply]
Archaeodontosaurus, would you be able to add the {{AI upscaled}} template to all of the files you have uploaded which were upscaled by AI? Another editor could also automate this templating process for you if you provided a simple list of the files. --Belbury (talk) 10:57, 15 December 2024 (UTC)[reply]
Comment As far as overwriting files with upscaled versions goes, there is already a policy in place on Commons, which states not to do that. In case of overwritten works, those edits should be reverted. The upscaled versions could still have a place here on Commons as separate uploads, though I agree with the others that their status as upscaled with AI should still be disclosed. ReneeWrites (talk) 14:33, 15 December 2024 (UTC)[reply]
There's a bit of a hole in this policy in that it doesn't say anything about uploading upscaled images as the only version of an image. We may need better guidance to users about this, probably along the lines of "if you're going to upload an upscaled photo, upload the original first". Omphalographer (talk) 19:26, 15 December 2024 (UTC)[reply]
The DR has been closed as keep since it is COM:INUSE. I don't think any AI upscaled file should be a Valued image, and this is definitely a cross-wiki issue that needs resolving because AI upscaled images should not replace originals. Abzeronow (talk) 19:37, 15 December 2024 (UTC)[reply]
@Abzeronow: Just an FYI, but I started a discussion about AI artwork on Wikipedia a while ago here. The discussion hasn't gotten many comments yet, but it sounds like AI generated or manipulated images clearly go against the guidelines on Wikipedia's end. Especially in cases where it isn't explicitly clear that's what they are. I'm not going to claim to know how that meshes with the guidelines on Commons, but I really don't think someone can claim AI manipulated or generated images are "legitimately in use" on Wikipedia if there's multiple users and guidelines saying they don't belong in articles. At that point the images clearly aren't being used in good faith. I'm not going to suggest it myself, but maybe it would be worth editing Commons:Project scope to say as much. --Adamant1 (talk) 19:52, 15 December 2024 (UTC)[reply]
I think AI advocates have good faith views. As someone who is somewhat resistant to technological change, I can see their viewpoint while disagreeing with it. And I think Archaeodontosaurus has good intentions. Abzeronow (talk) 20:03, 15 December 2024 (UTC)[reply]
Just to be clear, I meant it purely pragmatically. I don't really know or care what Archaeodontosaurus or anyone else's intentions are but there's no reason images should be kept on our end if the usage violates Wikipedia's guidelines to begin with. I assume they wouldn't consider it good faithed on their end to put AI generated artwork in articles anyway though. But hey, whatever. It's all about the vibes right? Who cares about policies, standards, or what Wikipedia users want. The more important thing is not offending anyone who advocates for AI artwork by saying that people on Wikipedia don't think it belongs in articles. --Adamant1 (talk) 20:14, 15 December 2024 (UTC)[reply]
I think the English Wikipedia might be something of an outlier for actually ruling out AI-upscaled historical content in its MOS. Most upscaled photographs I see going through Commons are for the French and Russian projects. Belbury (talk) 20:30, 15 December 2024 (UTC)[reply]
Oh yeah for sure. I don't know about the French language Wikipedia, but the Russian Wikipedia has absolutely no standards what-so-ever. At least from what I've seen they are totally fine with clearly inaccurate historical content. Everyone is different though. So I wouldn't go as far as saying every project doesn't allow for AI generated or altered images, but English Wikipedia clearly has a problem with both. --Adamant1 (talk) 20:35, 15 December 2024 (UTC)[reply]
There's also quite a few projects which don't have a position on AI content simply because the local community is small and hasn't made it a priority to develop policies. AI content ends up getting used on these projects not so much because it's permitted, but because no one's telling editors to not use it. Omphalographer (talk) 21:07, 15 December 2024 (UTC)[reply]
Then some Russian-speakers should do a RFC or some other policy discussion on Russian Wikipedia to see if the community thinks AI content violates rules. It is not in Commons purview to usurp that decision making. Abzeronow (talk) 21:33, 15 December 2024 (UTC)[reply]
Well, only when the English Wikipedia doesn't want it on their project right? Then it's totally cool to usurp their decision. Otherwise we have to respect the projects decision making. --Adamant1 (talk) 21:55, 15 December 2024 (UTC)[reply]
The only usage on Enwiki is a talk page, and the AI upscaled nature of it is discussed. It's used on other Wikipedias though and we don't privilege Enwiki above other Wikipedias. Abzeronow (talk) 21:19, 16 December 2024 (UTC)[reply]
I don't think we do either which is why I didn't claim we did, but I don't think we have a policy on Commons saying Commons:Project scope doesn't apply when AI is involved either. Or are you going to argue that Commons:Project_scope#File_not_legitimately_in_use shouldn't matter to AI generated images just because some random people who have absolutely nothing to do with this what-so-ever are generally good faithed about it? --Adamant1 (talk) 21:52, 15 December 2024 (UTC)[reply]
Not sure whether that close was the right call. As a counterpoint, Commons:Deletion requests/Files in Category:AI-upscaled paintings was closed last month with all the images being either deleted or reverted/redirected to non-upscaled versions, despite some being in use at the time.
It seems reasonable to expect that where this map image has been added to an article by someone other than the uploader, that person did not realise that it was an AI-upscaled version with smudged inaccuracies, and that they would not have used it if they'd been made aware of that. It's been the first search result on Commons for a year, presumably because it's a Valued Image, and is of a significantly higher resolution than all the other copies we have. Belbury (talk) 20:23, 15 December 2024 (UTC)[reply]
I just had a train of thought... Does somebody know about a Wikimedia project, be it a Wikipedia, -news, -voyage, -species, etc., who doesn't have criteria for verifiability and a need to name sources for its contents? If there's none as I tend to assume, then the whole point of whether AI generated or AI upscaled images are in scope (also per COM:INUSE) is moot IMHO and every addition to any Wikimedia project, besides a few usages to illustrate AI technology, from the outset against the basic requirement of verifiability, even if any project does not have a explicit policy about AI media. AI modified graphics are never verifiable and traceable back to their sources, inherently so due to the underlying software techniques of the AI models. They are always a condensation of most statistically probable colour and luminosity values for each pixel for any given prompt. Regards, Grand-Duc (talk) 01:04, 16 December 2024 (UTC)[reply]
As a past contributor to enwikiversity: those guidelines have never been enforced. The "Review Board" proposed in those guidelines is entirely hypothetical, and the project has been a magnet for crank science for years. This is part of why I'm no longer involved with that project. Omphalographer (talk) 03:20, 16 December 2024 (UTC)[reply]
Wikisource doesn't really care where the images on the author pages come from; they're not part of our primary content. And OCR is at least AI-adjacent, and it's heavily used on Wikisource. Honestly, any digital picture is full of "statistically probable colour and luminosity values"; converting the raw to JPEG involves approximating the data from the camera with cosines that hopefully don't change any important details as well as storing only one color sample for every four luminosity values (often after extrapolating the color sensors of the camera, which has RGB filters on each pixel, so they were a bit questionable to start with), plus in-camera corrections for lenses, plus a pile of numbers set by the camera or photographer (ISO, f-stops, camera speed, plane of focus) that may or may not be preserved by the EXIF data. It's always better to have an actual picture of a peach; but if I'm comparing a human drawn T-rex with an AI drawn T-rex, and the paleontologists say the latter is more accurate, I don't think verifiability changes anything.--Prosfilaes (talk) 03:42, 16 December 2024 (UTC)[reply]
Comment More on topic, I was comparing some of the upscaled images with the originals. The text on the map in File:(Venice) Fra'Mauro's World Map - Biblioteca Nazionale Marciana.jpg is clearly smeared to the point of being unreadable. Whereas the text in the original is perfectly fine. People can debate all day if someone intentionally uploading a clearly blurry, smeared file is good faithed or if a map that no one can even read because it's smeared is educational. It's pretty clear that these images shouldn't qualify as "valued images" though. Per Commons:Valued_image_value "valued images are less about perfect technical quality...and more about the useability of the information on the image page. There's nothing usable about a smeared, unreadable image of a map. None of the other files seem to be any better either. So all of these AI upscaled images should have their "valued images" status revoked since they clearly don't meet the standard. --Adamant1 (talk) 07:39, 16 December 2024 (UTC)[reply]
Artifacts from the upscaling are all over the drawing if you view it at full resolution. If you put them side by side you can see that the cardboard of the original has a texture of its own, and that texture returns in the other version, but here they are morphed into paint blots. As for the claim that no AI was involved, maybe by that he means he used a different post-processing method, but whatever you want to call it has severely impacted the integrity of these images. I would honestly like to see the originals uploaded to Commons as well, even if Archaeodontosaurus feels they are of inferior quality, but other people may feel differently about that. ReneeWrites (talk) 22:01, 16 December 2024 (UTC)[reply]
Ooof! yeah, that totally blows out a bunch of legitimate texture, to the point where if it is in any sense a photograph, then the "camera" in question is doing a bunch of dubious post-processing.
Given that the VI system has no described process for removing the status from an image, and that nobody has answered a project talk page thread asking about this from six months ago, I've been bold and removed the {{VI}} template from this map, to see if anybody connected to the project reacts to that. Commons shouldn't be boosting this to the top of search results as its "most valued image" of Fra Marco's map, when it is of significantly lower quality than other photographs in the same category. Belbury (talk) 11:34, 18 December 2024 (UTC)[reply]
I asked about it myself two days ago and haven't gotten an answer yet. From what I remember with prior incidents the images were just deleted, which isn't possible here even though it clearly should be. So just removing the templates seems like the only other option outside of waiting for months until someone responds with an actual solution. There really should be a more formal process for revoking valued image status from a file though. I'm actually kind of surprised there isn't one. --Adamant1 (talk) 11:42, 18 December 2024 (UTC)[reply]
Comment I confirm what I have already said, and I urge you to go and see the works of Suzanne Valadon, they have the particularity of being very colorful... See it for yourself and do not trust images from the Web which are of poor quality. --Archaeodontosaurus (talk) 06:24, 17 December 2024 (UTC)[reply]
@Archaeodontosaurus: No offense, but the images are clearly AI upscaled and there isn't any reason you wouldn't know about it. Especially since multiple people have confirmed it at this point. Can you at least stop nominating your uploads for "valued image" status until this is sorted out? Otherwise it seems like your just intentionally ignoring the issue, which isn't a super great way to deal with it. --Adamant1 (talk) 08:34, 17 December 2024 (UTC)[reply]
Would people support replacing this image with one that's maybe color-tuned to be a but less yellow but not AI upscaled? I'd be happy to do that. I don't think AI-upscaled images can ever be acceptable. AI upscaling introduces inaccuracies, it's a guess about what extra details are present. We should be about facts-we should not use a fake image over a real one over it just because it looks nicer. Otherwise I'd support deletion, removal of valued image status, etc. Blythwood (talk) 03:33, 18 December 2024 (UTC)[reply]
"Ever be acceptable" as valued images in particular? Or in general for Commons? Because I can agree with the former, but as to the latter, I think AI upscaled images can be very instructive here at Commons. —Justin (koavf)❤T☮C☺M☯03:39, 18 December 2024 (UTC)[reply]
Stance of Commons about usernames - verification needed?
Hello,
I happened to encounter User:ESackmann when I saw and nominated for deletion the File:Dreieckcover.jpg (so as to clarify its licensing status). I'm accustomed to DE-WP username verification procedures which are activated when an individual registers an account that seems to be named after a existing, living person. That is most likely the case here for this account, see comicplus+ und Eckart Sackmann. Does the Commons:Username policy also mandates a username verification? Regards, Grand-Duc (talk) 13:47, 15 December 2024 (UTC)[reply]
Commons doesn't have any policy I'm aware of for up-front username verification in the sense you're asking about. If there's doubt as to whether a user has rights to upload content, that's processed through COM:VRT - which may in fact end up verifying that the user is who they claim to be, but the focus is on the permissions, not the username. Omphalographer (talk) 21:10, 15 December 2024 (UTC)[reply]
Asking for license reviewing of 10 files
I'd like for a license reviewer or an administrator to apply the "LicenseReview" template to the 10 files in this category. I ask for it here, in place of using the template myself in each file, because some instructions are needed for the review (since there are not direct links to the individual source files, or even the collection containing all of them), and it's best done to all the files at once.
To verify the files and their license, one has to go to https://ideas.asturias.es/centro-de-descargas (most of the website is in Spanish, even if you select English at the upper right side). Then, click at Ortofotografía e Imágenes, and then, use the browser's search to find "ORTOFOTOMAPA DE ASTURIAS (1:5.000)" item, and click on it. There, in a paginated list, are (among many others) the 10 PDF files that were converted to the JPG images in Commons. Files names in the website don't have the "Ortofotomapa Asturias 2010-" prefix that they have in Commons, and they have a "C XX" municipality prefix in its place, but the rest of the name is exactly the same for all of them.
When you click on the download button for each PDF file, a "License and Terms of Use" dialog is shown, saying that the file is licensed under CC-by 4.0 "if not otherwise indicated" ("si no se indica lo contrario"). Since no other thing about the license is said in the page, list, or the files themselves, they have CC-by 4.0 license, and the "LicenseReview" template can be added to the file pages in Commons.
Probably, this is not the kind of file that most needs to have its license proved, but I highly appreciate having these files in Commons (in fact, helping to their dissemination and preservation is the reason why I started contributing here), so I would like to prevent any possible problem in the future. I wasn't aware that this option was available; if I had known about it, I'd have asked for it much earlier.
Thanks in advance. MGeog2022 (talk) 14:14, 15 December 2024 (UTC)[reply]
Hi MGeog2022! Done. Thank you for adding the detailed guide. The files are also there as jpg but I did not check if the resolution is better on the pdf than on the jpg. --MGA73 (talk) 11:06, 16 December 2024 (UTC)[reply]
Thank you VERY much!!! Yes, there are also JPG versions in the website, but they are very low resolution, the ones in Commons were generated by me from the PDF files. MGeog2022 (talk) 13:58, 16 December 2024 (UTC)[reply]
Heartily agree, but there was a long discussion of this, and someone (or someones) insisted that for consistency we needed to use the Gaelic plural, despite it being unknown to practically anyone who does not speak Irish Gaelic. I believe this was in the same discussion where someone else was insisting that we should call the Chancellors of Germany "Prime Ministers of Germany." - Jmabel ! talk23:29, 15 December 2024 (UTC)[reply]
Community Wishlist – Voting open for 'focus areas' about Commons tech proposals
In the Community Wishlist, one can now vote on new "focus areas" that bundle proposals relating to Commons – take a look.
If some of these problem areas win, maybe some of the tech requests contained in them actually get implemented. This may also include some of the requests in the Technical needs survey.
These are the new focus areas:
Improved discovery of media files – What is the value of contributing to a site or any of the other proposals if only very few know about/find and use it – proposals here include better discoverability on the Web as well as a date range filter in MediaSearch (by date taken)
Better stitching between Commons and other projects – e.g. directly show the Commons page which has the categories instead of this intermediate Wikipedia page; suggest media set in Wikidata items for their Wikipedia articles
Media formats, editing, and display – e.g. colored 3D models; easier subtitling; CropTool fix; video chapters / audio chapters (like clickable timestamps for sections in spoken Wikipedia audios)
New consumer experiences – e.g. make it easier to generate spoken Wikipedia audios (Video is difficult – Audio is the format Wikimedia could tackle next after text); reading-lists on desktop
I recommend checking out some of the wishes contained in these if you haven't yet which may clear up any potential confusion (why is this needed? what's the benefit of this? doesn't that already exist? etc).
One can vote for many focus areas, there's also Commons-unrelated ones. It could be that those are all the Commons-related areas or that there will be more but these four already do contain lots of the WMC-related proposals in the Wishlist.
@Jmabel: It's not super intuitive but there's a blue "Support focus area" button right below the start of the "voting" sections. I assume that's how people vote. --Adamant1 (talk) 08:47, 16 December 2024 (UTC)[reply]
Better stitching between Commons and other projects: if this is done at the file level, from Wikipedia, I fear that vandalism in the file pages will multiply, if no additional measures are taken. MGeog2022 (talk) 09:32, 16 December 2024 (UTC)[reply]
December 16
Bad bot recommendations
I thought we had put an end to bad bot edit recommendations, but this just came through on one of my photos today: saying that a photo of a sousaphone depicts a bugle. It says in the edit summary that the edit was suggested by the Android app. - Jmabel ! talk03:32, 16 December 2024 (UTC)[reply]
So the app now just suggests adding a "depicts," without suggesting a value? Anyway, that is clearly a sousaphone, and I have changed the "depicts" value to say so. - Jmabel ! talk05:24, 16 December 2024 (UTC)[reply]
Replace non-vector files with its vector versions.
Hi, I'm User:OperationSakura6144. I need to replace the following non-vector files with its vector versions in the following Wikipedia pages:
All of the pages have restricted editing, which makes impossible for me to edit the pages myself. So, I'd like you to do my job on my behalf. Thank you for hearing me out.
I wonder if there are any templates or pages here at Commons that should be updated too. For examples screenshots of Wikinews can now be licensed another license than CC-BY-2.5.
Hola @AbchyZa22: no soy un administrador, pero las imágenes generadas mediante AI no están sujetas a copyright (más información), y quedan, por tanto, automáticamente en dominio público, luego, hasta donde yo sé, cualquier imagen generada mediante AI por un usuario puede ser subida sin problema a Wikimedia Commons, en cuanto a copyright (siempre que además sea considerada como apta para una finalidad educativa). MGeog2022 (talk) 15:33, 16 December 2024 (UTC)[reply]
AbchyZa22 wrote here to warn administrators that images generated by Grok AI (created by Elon Musk) include a non-freely licensed watermark, so when images generated by this AI tool are uploaded to Wikimedia Commons, and they contain that watermark, it may be necessary to delete them (or maybe removing the watermark is enough, since AI generated images are public domain in any case). MGeog2022 (talk) 19:43, 16 December 2024 (UTC)[reply]
Vale, el logo es dominio público, luego solamente se trata de una cuestión estética. En ese caso, no es algo que sea muy importante (no creo que sea tan necesario que los administradores lo tengan presente).
---
OK, the logo is in the public domain, so it's only a purely aesthetical issue. In that case, this isn't a very important issue (I don't think it's so necessary for administrators to keep this in mind). MGeog2022 (talk) 20:55, 16 December 2024 (UTC)[reply]
Currently, there is a voting process on Meta currently going on. You are invited to express your support if you think these issues are important. The topics also touch working on Commons, so this sounds relevant here. --PantheraLeo1359531 😺 (talk) 13:26, 16 December 2024 (UTC)[reply]
Notification of DMCA takedown demand — Kenhub videos
i'm asking because i made a tool for quick access to topedits, but i embedded it in another tool. i'd like to know if there is demand for this functionality and hence a standalone tool.--RoyZuo (talk) 18:24, 16 December 2024 (UTC)[reply]
A dangerous precedent - DMCA after false relicensing
I wish to make the community aware of a serious issue that seems to be arising as Commons ages. I had a habit of uploading material in 2014-2016 from other sources to Commons, with much of it lost from the internet today, no longer accessible through traditional sources. I did not have the habit of archiving all pages with license information at that time, something I only later began with.
The reason I bring this up here, is twofold: 1) this is the second time I have seen this bait-and-switch with regard to licensing, with me having to spend time to comb through the Internet Archive last time to identify that it was originally licensed under CC-BY, and 2) that I do not find that the message on my talk page abides by community guidelines or takes account the WMF's role on Commons. It makes threats of banning me relating to repeat DMCA violation - which can not be grounds for a ban. Rather the question is if the copyright has been violated, which it hasn't, an issue which as far as I can see has not even been explored here. This has a potential chilling effect, in part because it requires me to disclose my name to counter-claim, which violates community guidelines - but also in part because this legal battle should be precisely for the WMF to take, not me personally. This is about a private entity, uploading to a YouTube channel which they still control, then revoking the CC-license, and issuing a DMCA-takedown request 9 years later.
There was never a source linked on these file pages and the license was never proven. When noticed by someone these files would already have been deleted. GPSLeo (talk) 19:17, 16 December 2024 (UTC)[reply]
Of course there was, are you telling me that it was unlicensed for 9 years? And what do you mean by proven? The page included a link to a page that upon being uploaded in 2015 included correct license information, that subsequently was changed. As I said, this is not about "proof". The matter at hand is about pages changing their licensing. I don't care one bit about the file itself, it was of marginal use. CFCF (talk) 19:19, 16 December 2024 (UTC)[reply]
Your license information was Anatomy video from youtube by Kenhub. Licenced as CC-BY as of download date 3/1/15. This is quite plausible, though you didn't provide a link to the YouTube video directly. I'm absolutely assuming your good faith and willing to believe that this was the case, but we would need proof (see my comment below). Gestumblindi (talk) 19:23, 16 December 2024 (UTC)[reply]
(edit conflict) Just as a service, if you intended to ping Joe Sutherland, your link didn't work, because his user account is User:JSutherland (WMF), but this link should generate the ping now. - Without deeply delving into the specific case, I agree that, if the videos ware originally uploaded to YouTube under CC-BY and the license was changed later (after you transferred the videos to Commons in 2015), you are of course not at fault and could have done nothing to prevent this. There was no License review as far as I can see (as an admin), so we have no proof, but maybe the original license can still be found at the Internet Archive or the like. As CC-BY licenses are irrevocable, maybe the WMF itself should file a counter-notice in case it can be shown that the content was - and therefore would still be -, in fact, freely licensed? Gestumblindi (talk) 19:21, 16 December 2024 (UTC)[reply]
As response to both comments, that seems possible I could have for whatever reason have omitted the link in lieu of the name of the video. I don't think it's likely that the correct license can be found, as YouTube is generally not covered by the Internet Archive, and I have no idea at what date they relicensed. Also, frankly - I don't think it's worth it for these files (also why I only uploaded 2 of maybe something like 50 files at the time). I never did find any use for them in any project, and restoring them would likely leave them as orphans. However, I think the issue itself is the dangerous thing. We have amassed a huge trove of material that could be relicensed incorrectly, and even if material has been "proven" - does that imply that a permanent record of the licensing has been kept? CFCF (talk) 19:43, 16 December 2024 (UTC)[reply]
YouTube video pages which are linked from Wikimedia web pages are generally pretty well covered by the Internet Archive. Unfortunately, since none of the source videos were linked on these files, it's quite possible that the original videos weren't archived. Even if they were, we have no easy way to find them. (Kenhub appears to have refreshed their YouTube content at some point between 2015 and now; the original videos don't seem to be online anymore.) Omphalographer (talk) 20:59, 16 December 2024 (UTC)[reply]
Asking for license review before it's too late, as I just did here, is a good option, especially for sites like YouTube and Flickr (this fact should be better known). Sadly, it seems that for this case, it was too late. Linking to the exact video, if a Commons bot automatically archived the page in Wayback Machine, would be another way to prevent this. About a year ago, a survey was carried out, and I created this proposal to try to avoid this kind of problem. In fact, I wasn't aware of the existence of license review then: that's basically what I was asking for, and nobody said in the discussion page that it already existed (perhaps what I exactly meant was not well understood). MGeog2022 (talk) 21:17, 16 December 2024 (UTC)[reply]
I don't think anyone is suggesting to tackle this one file at a time. I don't care about this file, and came here to make this general point. CFCF (talk) 20:15, 16 December 2024 (UTC)[reply]
The "Show more" link on the Wayback Machine archive doesn't work properly for me, but looking at the HTML source isn't hopeful (whitespace elided): <h4 class="title">License</h4><ul class="content watch-info-tag-list"><li>Standard YouTube License</li></ul> --bjh21 (talk) 22:38, 16 December 2024 (UTC)[reply]
That's what I was looking for. IMO this doesn't look good. I support deleting these videos unless we get some evidence of a free license. Yann (talk) 18:07, 17 December 2024 (UTC)[reply]
@Yann: I've found some evidence of a free licence. Since this is complicated and not really related to the original subject of this thread, I plan to start a discussion about it over on COM:VPC. --bjh21 (talk) 14:08, 18 December 2024 (UTC)[reply]
Unfortunately, one of the details of the DMCA is that a web publisher relying on the DMCA, like Wikimedia does, must block users that get too many DMCA strikes. You do have the right to counter the DMCA, at which point the company would have to drop it or initiate legal action against you. I don't think it's an issue here; Wikimedia just doesn't get enough DMCA strikes to ever block someone over them.--Prosfilaes (talk) 21:58, 16 December 2024 (UTC)[reply]
I agree with attempting to counter the DMCA takedown notice if you believe that it is wrong. Sometimes DMCA notices are overzealous, specious or downright fraudulent. During my time at Wikimedia, there were several successful counters, and I have myself countered takedown notices from YouTube successfully as well (for public domain music, for example. Bastique☎ let's talk!17:11, 17 December 2024 (UTC)[reply]
Typically, the WMF refuses to act on DMCA complaints that are clearly bogus. In this case, however, I think the WMF took the correct action. There is no evidence to point to in order to back up the free license claim, other than CFCF's statement. Thus it is up to CFCF to dispute the DMCA take-down. It would be dangerous folly for the WMF to risk its DMCA safe-harbor status by blindly defending every challenged upload. The best way to prevent this from occurring in the future is to simply link to the YouTube video from the file page, as this will cause the YouTube page to be archived in the Internet Archive by IABot. Nosferattus (talk) 18:49, 17 December 2024 (UTC)[reply]
I tried to improve some of the descriptions of the diagrams and missing categorization.
Reviewing it a bit closer, I'm not entirely convinced by the title of the work being used and the person mentioned as author. The PDF includes a one page memorandum and a revised version of a circular. All diagrams are from the circular.
How can we prevent the same from happening again in the future? For this to determine, we would need to know in more detail how the automated process worked. In the meantime, I'd suggest doing it manually and reviewing each file. ∞∞ Enhancing999 (talk) 08:35, 19 December 2024 (UTC)[reply]
In summary, the main question explored in these calls was whether the Wikimedia Foundation should continue to develop structured data, or make the category system multilingual and easier to use. In both calls, there was broad agreement that we shouldn’t maintain two essentially separate systems. There was a preference by the people who intervened for developing structured data, tempered by an awareness that the community has been using categories for so long that any switch would require a lot of technical and social commitment.
To read the full summary of the call, please refer to the appropriate subpage.
Next steps and upcoming conversations
We are working on the summary of our December conversation about new media and new contributors, and we hope to publish that in early January. You will be alerted in time when this happens.
Also, there will be another two rounds of conversations on January 15 and on February 5, at 08:00 UTC and 16:00 UTC. You can subscribe to the events by going to the Commons Community Calls project page and clicking on the relevant link (you'll be redirected to the event on Meta).
Abzeronow originally proposed one solution for Commons, but Rudolph Buch has suggested several alternatives, and I have a different idea of my own, and I want to make sure we have at least a strong consensus before moving files. Proposals C, D, and E all come from Rudolph Buch; I've done my best not to alter any of his meaning but you can check [7] to verify that. Keep in mind that due to templating, there are many templates on various wikis that will necessarily use File:Flag of Syria.svg.
C) Do nothing and to trust the wiki editors in updating their pages.
D) Rename File:Flag of Syria.svg to File:Flag of Syria (1980).svg without leaving a redirect. This will lead to a huge amount of broken image links (which is bad) but prompt the editors to check what flag is right for the respective page (which is good).
E) let a bot replace File:Flag of Syria.svg by File:Flag of the Syrian revolution.svg at all wiki pages. [If I understand correctly, this means to bot-edit all of the sister projects, rather than change anything at Commons. @Rudolph Buch, please let me know if that is not what you meant.]
I believe the following remark from Rudolph Buch sums up his objection to proposal A (and presumably to proposal B): "Would that automatically feed the new flag into ~500 Wikipedia pages regardless of context and caption? Like when File:Flag of Syria.svg is now used to illustrate that this is the flag that was adopted in 1980 and after the move it shows the 2024 flag without hint in the page history or any other warning to the Wikipedia editors?" User:The Squirrel Conspiracy replied to that (in part), "Correct. However the projects have backed themselves into a weird corner because there's also templates that - instead of asking for an image - automatically pull the file with the name "Flag of [country name].svg" - and those would have the wrong image if we don't move it."
Further thought: in both proposal A and proposal B, if we allow "Move and replace" to take place when we move File:Flag of Syria.svg to Flag of the United Arab Republic (1958–1971), Flag of Syria (1980–2024).svg, that will change all explicit uses of File:Flag of Syria.svg in sister projects to use the new name, which will show up in the relevant page histories, watchlists, etc. It will not affect those pages where a template generates "[[:File:Flag of Syria.svg]]. In contrast, proposal E is likely to change exactly the uses that specifically meant this particular flag, while not solving the issue for template uses, and proposal D will break all the template usages. So 'my own "ranked choices" would be B, A, C, while definitely opposing D or E. - Jmabel ! talk01:28, 19 December 2024 (UTC)[reply]
Introducing Let's Connect!
Hello Wikimedia Commons contributors,
I hope that you are in good spirits. My name is Chinmayee Mishra and I am a part of the Let’s Connect working group - a team of movement contributors/organizers and liaisons for 7 regions : MENA | South Asia | East, South East Asia, Pacific | Sub-Saharan Africa | Central & Eastern Europe | Northern & Western | Latina America.
Why are we outreaching to you?
Wikimedia has 18 projects, and 17 that are solely run by the community, other than the Wikimedia Foundation. We want to hear from sister projects that some of us in the movement are not too familiar with and would like to know more about. We always want to hear from Wikipedia, but we also want to meet and hear from the community members in other sister projects too. We would like to hear your story and learn about the work you and your community do. You can review our past learning clinics here.
We want to invite community members who are:
Part of an organized group, official or not
A formally recognized affiliate or not
An individual who will bring their knowledge back to their community
An individual who wants to train others in their community on the learnings they received from the learning clinics.
To participate as a sharer and become a member of the Let’s Connect community you can sign up through this registration form.
Once you have registered, if you are interested, you can get to know the team via google meets or zoom to brainstorm an idea for a potential learning clinic about Wikimedia Commons or just say hello and meet the team. Please email us at letsconnectteam@wikimedia.org .
We look forward to hearing from you :)