u-wallpapers include Creative Commons v2 licenses which are controversial
Affects | Status | Importance | Assigned to | Milestone | |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
ubuntu-wallpapers (Ubuntu) |
Confirmed
|
Medium
|
Unassigned |
Bug Description
The Ubuntu Wallpapers for 15.10 include Creative Commons version 2 licensed photos.
https:/
This is in contrast to what was in debian/copyright up until that point and what I believe the guidelines say:
https:/
There's good reason to have version 3 of Creative Commons by the minimum standard.
It is widely believe in Debian that version 2 isn't good enough. (Version 1 is definitively believed to have not been DFSG-compatible).
See
https:/
And see bug 1588938 as just one example, where Debian developers reported the issue with CC version 2 files to the GNOME developers who replaced the images in the new release.
To summarize, Creative Commons version 2 licenses should be avoided in Ubuntu because they are mostly avoided in Debian.
summary: |
- u-wallpapers includes Creative Commons v2 licenses which are + u-wallpapers include Creative Commons v2 licenses which are controversial |
Changed in ubuntu-wallpapers (Ubuntu): | |
status: | Confirmed → New |
status: | New → Incomplete |
status: | Incomplete → Confirmed |
I'm not sure I've seen that wiki page before (or long enough ago that I've forgotten it), so thank you for that! It should be linked from the FreeCultureShowcase page for sure.
I don't mind CC-* 3.0, (I'm actually all for 4.0!) but we use Yahoo to gather photos, and Yahoo specifically references CC-BY 2.0 and CC-BY-SA 2.0, so it's not possible to get differently licensed photos that way. We could ask photographers to place an alternate license in the photo description, but I'm concerned that most submitters aren't reading the licensing guidelines in the first place before submitting. Almost all of the maintenance work each cycle during the contest is checking every entry by hand for proper licensing.
On the other hand, I have a very detailed, modular form letter explaining licenses that--to my surprise--has only been met with appreciation. So maybe we could require an explicit license. But it will probably triple the amount of work required in administering the contest.