Wikipedia:WikiProject Opera/Copyright guidelines

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Wikipedia takes copyright violations in articles very seriously and so does WikiProject Opera. The guidelines below must be observed. Editors who fail to do so will quickly bring themselves into disrepute. At the very least your edits will be reverted, and in some cases whole articles deleted. Persistent violation will lead to blocking. Don't steal other people's work. We're not in a race here. Better an honest stub, or no article at all, than one which violates copyright.

Guidelines

  • In the United States, where Wikipedia's foundation and servers are based, a copyright source is any printed text first published after 1923 and any web page text without an explicit statement that it is published under a license compatible with the Creative Commons Attribution-ShareAlike 3.0 License. There is a list of compatible licenses here.
  • If there is any doubt whatsoever as to whether a text is copyright, always assume that it is.
  • Never paste text from a copyright source directly into an article, even temporarily.
  • Significant chunks of copyright material must not appear anywhere on Wikipedia, including user pages. Any small extracts on your user pages for temporary drafting purposes should be clearly marked with quotation marks and have the source attributed.

See also FAQs below.

FAQs

;1. Can I copy material from my own or my client's website, or material that I have written for another website or publisher?

No, unless the website explicitly displays one of the licenses under Guidelines above. If not, you must take the proper steps to donate the material to Wikipedia or obtain documented proof of permission from the copyright holder. It's not a simple process. You need to follow the procedures at Donating copyrighted materials or Requesting copyright permission. A note on the talk page of the article saying that you are the author or have permission from the author is not sufficient. Until properly documented permission is received, the material will be removed or the article may be blanked with Template:Copyviocore.

Note also that even if permission is documented, material from an artist's or organization's official web site is almost invariably promotional to some degree and will require significant editing to achieve a neutral, encyclopedic tone.

;2. Can I copy material in the public domain?

Yes, provided it actually is in the public domain, and that issue can be complex. You must read Wikipedia's public domain guidance first. Note that even public domain material must be attributed. Attribution templates for this purpose can be found at :Category:Attribution templates. The most relevant ones for this project include:

:{{tl|Grove1sted}} – Grove's Dictionary of Music and Musicians (1st ed.), 1879-1889

:{{tl|1911}} – Encyclopædia Britannica (11th ed.), 1911

:{{tl|DNB}} – Dictionary of National Biography (1st ed.), 1885–1900

;3. Can I quote from a copyright source?

Yes, you can use a brief quotation of copyright text to illustrate a point, establish context, or attribute a point of view or idea. However, the text must be clearly marked as a quote either with quotation marks or block quote, and the source must be attributed. Extensive quotation of copyrighted text is prohibited. See Non-free content and Quotations for more.

;4. Is it OK to use copyright text if I switch the phrases around, change some of the words to their synonyms and leave out some?

No, that's called close paraphrasing, and is also a copyright infringement. Without clear attribution, it also passes off someone else's writing as your own (plagiarism). It can sometimes be difficult deciding when the line has been crossed into unacceptably close paraphrasing. But as a guide, where the text is only superficially modified and retains the same basic sentence structure, vocabulary, and tone, the paraphrase is too close. Below are some examples of closely paraphrased individual sentences. When there is a series of sentences like these from the same source, all closely paraphrased, the line has been crossed.

:Source: "In St Petersburg, Bullant probably gave his first concert there as a virtuoso bassoonist on 20 November/1 December 1780 (MGG1; according to Findeyzen not until 21 February 1781), playing some of his own works;"Brook, Barry S. et al., "Bullant, Antoine", Grove Music Online, ed. L. Macy

:Close paraphrase: Bullant gave his first concert in St Petersburg as a virtuoso bassoonist in either November or December 1780, playing some of his own works.

:Source: "Meanwhile, Admeto has a miraculous recovery to the joy of all Thessaly."Opera Today, [http://www.operatoday.com/content/2007/12/gluck_alceste_2.php Gluck: Alceste]

:Close paraphrase: Meanwhile, Admeto miraculously recovers to the joy of the kingdom.

A very limited amount of close paraphrase may be acceptable under fair use, especially when discussing critical appraisals of a work or a singer but then you should attribute the source in the actual text of the article as well as in the citation. Alternatively, you can use a brief attributed quote. For example:

:Source: "It is certainly his most imaginative opera score, and it reveals an instinct for theatrical emotion that any opera composer would be proud of."MacDonald, Hugh, "Samson et Dalila ", Grove Music Online ed. L. Macy

:Fair-use, attributed paraphrase: Hugh Macdonald has described the score of Samson et Dalila as the most imaginative of all Saint-Saens' operas, revealing a real instinct for theatrical emotion.

:Fair use attributed quote: Hugh Macdonald has described Samson et Dalila as Saint-Saens' "most imaginative opera score", revealing "an instinct for theatrical emotion that any opera composer would be proud of."

Fair-use attributed paraphrase, like fair use quotes, must be used very sparingly. Extensive fair-use attributed paraphrase of a single copyrighted text is prohibited.

;5. Can I copy a translation of an out-of-copyright work?

Only if the translation itself is out of copyright. For example, you cannot copy text from Anthony M. Esolen's new translation of Tasso's La Gerusalemme liberata, published in 2000. However, you can copy from the one by Edward Fairfax, first published in 1600.

;6. Can I translate a copyright source from a foreign language into English and paste that into Wikipedia?

No, your translation is a derivative work. It cannot be published on Wikipedia without the original copyright holder's permission. You must treat your translation like any other copyright text. You may use it as a source of information only, not a source of expression. Below is an example of translated text from a copyright source that cannot be pasted into an article except as a brief attributed fair use quote or paraphrase (see FAQ 4):

:Original Italian: "E' un testo multietnico, che parla di tre donne diverse, vittime di un sequestro."Il Resto del Carlino, "Cristina Pavarotti 'scrive' la lirica", 23 September 2009.

:English translation: It is a multi-ethnic text about three different women, victims of a kidnapping.

;7. Can I copy or closely paraphrase a plot description of an out-of-copyright work?

Plot descriptions, like any other text, cannot be copied or closely paraphrased from other sources, including official sources, unless that source can be verified to be public domain or licensed compatibly with Wikipedia. The age of the work being described is irrelevant.

There are some out of copyright sources for opera plots such as Krehbiel's 1919 [http://www.archive.org/details/abookoperasthei00krehgoog Book of Operas: Their Histories, Their Plots, and Their Music] and various pre-1923 programmes and libretti which can be found on Project Gutenberg and The Internet Archive. However, many of these older texts may need considerable editing to achieve a concise, flowing, and encyclopedic style.

;8. Can I paste text from other Wikipedia articles?

Yes, but unless you have written the text yourself, you must attribute it in either the edit summary or on the talk page of the article where you have pasted it. See copying within Wikipedia for how to do this.

Notes

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