Wikipedia:Freedom of Panorama 2015
Per Wikipedia talk:Freedom of Panorama 2015#Update: we won; stand down banners. - the MEP who proposed the restriction, Cavada, is now recommending deletion of his own text. The immediate threat is over, so while discussion on how to respond is appropriate there is no need for a banner in the immediate future |
This page incorporates content from Commons:Freedom of Panorama 2015, a page hosted on another Wikimedia Foundation project. Please consult the history of the original page to see a list of its authors. |
We have until Wednesday 1 July 2015 to convince MEPs to file an amendment.
We have until Thursday 9 July 2015 to convince MEPs to stop or amend the problematic text, that the European Parliament
16. Considers that the commercial use of photographs, video footage or other images of works which are permanently located in physical public places should always be subject to prior authorisation from the authors or any proxy acting for them;
There are two ways to stop this text becoming part of the adopted European Parliament report:
- Delete the whole passage and have the final version not mention FoP at all.
- Change the text to say something that would not hurt us.
Either way, we need to find 75—76 MEPs (10% of the parliament) until 1 July 2015 to sign up to an amendment proposal so it can be voted on in plenary.
This page, talkpage and associated sub-pages are a space to try to put together a campaign to do that.
Resources
edit- Hashtag #saveFoP: Twitter & Facebook; also in use #protectFoP
- See hashtags and tweets at: commons:CommonsFreedom of Panorama 2015/Tweets
AMENDMENTS 281 - 556 Draft report Julia Reda-- now of historical relevance only- official “Procedure file” (overview page) at europa.eu
- Julia Reda's comment on the amended version of her report
- Julia Reda on FoP under threat with good overview of the consequences
- "European Parliament committee adopts controversial pro-user copyright reform report", Ars Technica
- Signpost article: "Three weeks to save Freedom of Panorama in Europe"
- "Freedom of Panorama is under attack" by OwenBlacker (enwiki) on Medium, which borrows heavily from Jheald's Signpost article
- "La libertà di panorama è sotto attacco" by @__sabas, a translation of OwenBlacker's Medium piece.
- List of members of the European Parliament, 2014–19
- commons:COM:FOP and commons:Category:Censored by lack of FOP (blacked-out buildings -- see also national sub-cats)
- Talking points (originally from https://docs.google.com/document/d/13Rg3WhXbRZugbDLeLdm0r0Tj_tGGJel2oxI0bHLaLSM/edit)
- Italian cultural heritage on the Wikimedia projects (March 2015)
- EU policy/Documentation and related EU policy subpages on Meta
Country sub-pages
edit- Österreich (Austria, AT)
- Bulgaria
- CAT
- Czech Republic
- Deutschland (Germany, DE)
- Eesti (Estonia, EE)
- España (Spain, ES)
- France
- IE
- Netherlands
- Poland
- Sweden
- UK
Project specific sub-pages
edit- Commons
- Catalan Wikipedia
- Galician Wikipedia
- Hungarian Wikipedia
- Greek Wikipedia
- German Wikipedia
- Spanish Wikipedia
- Polish Wikipedia
- Swedish Wikipedia
- Meta
Banner
edit- Discussion and proposals on c:Commons:Freedom of Panorama 2015/Proposed messages.
Below two designs of a banner with a first suggestion of text. Romaine (talk) 04:18, 21 June 2015 (UTC)
Alternative:
The title must be something that the readers easily understand and all would agree with. For the moment, the best I can come up with is: "Photos of modern buildings must remain on Wikipedia". The line below should explain what is going on. First suggestion: "A proposal in the European Parliament puts thousands of images on Wikipedia in danger of being deleted." Please give suggestions for improvements! Romaine (talk) 04:18, 21 June 2015 (UTC)
- Discussion and proposals on c:Commons:Freedom of Panorama 2015/Proposed messages.
- Romaine This links to a black/redlink page on Commons. Is that intentional? —Sladen (talk) 13:42, 26 June 2015 (UTC)
- Done Fixed to be to c:Commons:Freedom of Panorama 2015/Proposed messages. —Sladen (talk) 13:57, 26 June 2015 (UTC)
- Romaine This links to a black/redlink page on Commons. Is that intentional? —Sladen (talk) 13:42, 26 June 2015 (UTC)
Discussion
editI'd be tempted to consider: "EU law change may stop images of buildings on Wikipedia. Act now before 1 July 2015. More information" as being a bit more to-the-point and having a strong call-to-action/deadline. —Sladen (talk) 13:46, 26 June 2015 (UTC)
- How about: "Artists, photographers, film-makers, and Wikipedia to be banned from using photos or film from public streets that have any statues--or buildings--in them!!! Protect freedom of panorama in Europe..." ? (But, is what we're being told here too simple? Then how do Rick Steves's Europe and other travel TV shows and documentaries get by, when they film from public squares and streets in Italy, currently? By the way, you can see Rick Steves' Europe on Hulu.com for free, in the U.S. right now.) --doncram 21:38, 26 June 2015 (UTC)
- The proposed banner seems strange to me. Are we then only concerned about 'photos of modern buildings'? The amendment 16 seems to be more stringent than that, including, for example, banning a painting by a Wikipedia editor of a sculpture in an old building or in a public square. Apuldram (talk) 22:47, 28 June 2015 (UTC)
Status
editBased on the political situation, the current plan to activate a banner for the issue Freedom of Panorama is ate the date of 2 July. Then we plan to set up a banner in multiple countries of the European Union. The banner has two purposes: informing the public and making the politicians in the European Parliament aware of this subject. The text of the banner will be written by the Wikimedia team that follows the political situation in the European Parliament in collaboration with and approval of the legal team of the Wikimedia Foundation. The banner has to fullfill the criteria of credible, compelling, accurate and has to fit in the long term strategy of the EU policy group.
Besides the banner, the team has asked the Wikimedia Foundation to come with an official statement on the subject of the situation in the European Union. Their intention is to come with an official statement on 2 july, and or a WMF blog post about this.
The official landing page of the campaign is Freedom of Panorama in Europe in 2015, and can be linked to with http://meta.wikipedia/wiki/saveFoP and the hashtag that can be used is #saveFoP. Romaine (talk) 10:12, 27 June 2015 (UTC)
Voting: outcomes
editToday the European Parliament voted about the copyright report, including the subject Freedom of Panorama.
- The negative text by Cavada (Freedom of Panorama only non-commercial in whole EU) was dropped by 502 to 40.
- The positive text by Schaake (full Freedom of Panorama in whole EU) didn't pass by 228 to 303.
- The report as a whole was accepted with 445 to 65 with 32 abstentions.
Thanks everyone, we almost manage to achieve a full swing, which is a very tough feat to get done in 3 weeks.
What is next?
Autumn 2015: European Commission planned proposal on a renewed EU Directive.