Archive:Media Credit Lines within Articles

From Citizendium
Revision as of 03:07, 20 October 2007 by imported>Stephen Ewen (→‎How to add the credit line)
Jump to navigation Jump to search
Under discussion at http://forum.citizendium.org/index.php/topic,1263.0.html
Crediting images within articles is like providing an open door for providers to happily contribute their best to the project.(CC) Photo: Brian Yap

Giving credit to real-named persons or entities in credit lines beneath images is an appropriate way to honor them as content providers and can serve as a very important incentive for high quality media contributions, usages without fees, and goodwill toward the project (see this photographer's views on the matter, for example). Accordingly, and to provide this, as well as to provide a standardized and consistent look to all CZ articles and to facilitate ease of enforcement of this and other media policies concurrently, all images and other media appearing in Citizendium articles should be credited to the image provider within the image caption within the article, with two occasional exceptions. How to credit media providers within articles, and the exceptions when you should not, are described below.

This is how credit lines appear. Note how the text is gray.(CC) Photo: Ian Muttoo

Is it an image or a photo?

  • Use "image" for non-photographic images
  • Use "photo" for photographs
  • Use "image" for public domain photos credited only to the provider

How to add the credit line

To add credit lines, click on the Metadata.png on the image information template and add the code and credited party as in the directions below.

Follow the pattern in the examples. See how it appears in situ to the right.

Public domain image credited only to providing source.(PD) Photo: Easton Historical Society

Attribution

Creative Commons family

Attribution photo. © Photo: Jeff Dean
  • {{CC-anon-photo}} - use in the rare instance the attribution is requested removed by the copyright holder
    • Add: {{CC-anon-photo}}
A GFDL image.GNU Image

Copyrighted stuff

This image is attributed simply as "PD Image" (rather than to Google Books, which is embarrassing to some) and is footnoted to the actual book source it appeared in.[1]PD Image

GNU family

Fuzzy provenance, so we avoid taking a position on the matter.(?) Image: University of Amsterdam Archives

Public Domain

  • {{PD-image}} - use regardless of image type when credited only to the provider

When the provenance cannot be ascertained

  • {{?-photo}} - Rarely used. Provenance uncertain, though we've tried; probably used under fair use
  • {{?-image}} - Rarely used. Provenance uncertain, though we've tried; probably used under fair use

Removal of credit lines for open content licensed media—how to opt out

Some open content licenses (for example the Creative Commons family of licenses) give the author the right to request removal of credit. Such requests should be made to the constabulary (in the future to media-assets@citizendium.org) who will keep a record of such requests. The requests will naturally be respected by Citizendium.

About crediting public domain media

How to credit providers of Public Domain media within image boxes depends upon the specific instance of it; all should be credited, although not always to a named person.

Images obtained from museums or other collections-holders, for example, should usually be credited to both the original author (unless unknown) and to the museum or other provider of the work. Crediting original authors provides readers with very useful information, and crediting providers is frequently a terms of use requirement—or a fully proper courtesy, irregardless—plus it provides various incentives to providers that are very beneficial to Citizendium.[2]

However, there are two exceptions to crediting specifically the provider of an instance of public domain media within articles.

  1. Authors of recent images released into the "Public Domain" should be assumed to not want credit within articles, as that may be a principle reason why they released their work into the Public Domain. Such media must still be credited to the author on the image description page.
  2. Instances of public domain media may sometimes have been acquired from a source that would lower the prestigiousness of CZ if credited within an image box within an article. To avoid this perception, these too may be credited simply {{PD-anon-image}} within the article's image box. The source from which the image was acquired must irregardless be documented on the image description page and perhaps cited in a footnote.

Bear in mind that media by pseudonymous persons should still be avoided, barring unusual and rare circumstances.

Crediting media uploaded by CZ contributors

Citizendium contributors who upload their own photos should also be credited within the image caption, unless they opt out of this on the image's description page. Please keep CZ:Policy on Self-Promotion in mind when using your own photos—the choice of photos should be based upon quality and licensing alone, not upon the name of the photographer. Given this, it is not considered self-promotion to credit your own images within articles.

Alternate design plan?

Also see idea for Alternate design layout for credit lines.

  1. in Henry Sutherland Edwards, The Polish Captivity (1863) p. 175 at [1]
  2. Museums should not be viewed and accorded as adversaries but as partners with Citizendium in providing content to the public, so that formal partnerships will be more much more likely to develop.