Talk:Bathhouse Row

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Someone erroneously put a copyvio notice without seeing the article history says "New article with public domain text from NPS site". The title page states it is authored by Soullière for the National Park Service, and in the nomination documentation she identifies herself as an Architectural Historian, National Park Service -- Southwest Regional Office, Santa Fe, New Mexico. Government document by a government employee. U.S. Government public domain. (SEWilco 03:31, 23 September 2007 (UTC))

But you copied it word for word, even the Bibliography. None of it is put in your own words. If you are merely going to reproduce a government site as a Wikipedia article, why bother? Why not just provide a link to the government site, and not pretend it is a Wikipedia article? --Mattisse 14:08, 24 September 2007 (UTC)
It is a starting point for a Wikipedia article. Editing is expected. One reason for copying it is so editing can begin here. Another reason for copying it is in case it vanishes from the original location. And the material is informative about the topic. Nevertheless, you're discussing the material in the article and not your claim that it is a copyright violation. Do you still claim that it is a copyright violation to use material which is U.S. Government public domain? (SEWilco 15:36, 24 September 2007 (UTC))
On the technical issue of whether this is a copyright violation, I gather it is not, as the material was written and the photos were taken by a US Government employee. The material certainly is informative. On copying it to preserve it in case the original source vanishes, I don't think it is likely that the original source will vanish. But upon further thought after comparing the original source and this article, however, I would prefer that the new article started as a stub that refers to the excellent source that SEWilco found, and that also uses the photos that he prepared and added. I created such a stub article as a proposed substitute, at Bathhouse Row/Temp. Following this approach would be consistent with practice within WP:NRHP, where I myself have created many stubs, some of which have since developed into better articles. I think that I and others would feel more comfortable adding information to what is an obvious stub, including drawing selected quotes from the excellent source identified. Hopefully this proposal will be satisfactory to both of you. If the original article is kept, on the other hand, I would prefer that each passage that is drawn from the source should be put into quotes (I myself would be willing to edit it to make that clear). Sincerely, doncram 19:49, 26 September 2007 (UTC)
Further I meant to say thanks for calling attention to the National Park Service online book source about the architecture of many park structures, not just Bathhouse Row. I wasn't previously aware of the source. I just added mention of the source to Bryce Canyon Lodge article to which I had previously contributed, and to El Tovar. I will do same for other 20 or so sites covered by that source. doncram 20:05, 26 September 2007 (UTC)
There is no need to delete material just because one editor is confused about copyrights and usage. I suspect he's been helping deal with real copyvios and didn't notice this item does have a legal source and an optional but ethically proper recognition of the author. (SEWilco 20:12, 26 September 2007 (UTC))
It may not be a copyright violation but, presenting long passages from the source without quotes around them has the appearance of plagiarism. And, I am one WP:NRHP editor who would prefer not to have the long passages in place, but rather would prefer to develop new writing from scratch. As I said, I have proposed an alternative stub article at Bathhouse Row/Temp. Could we please use that and be done with this discussion sooner rather than later? Sincerely, doncram 14:36, 27 September 2007 (UTC)

Public domain

This is a quote from the Wikipedia:Copyright FAQ

All work produced by employees of the U.S. federal government as part of their work is public domainthus, much of the content found on U.S. government websites (.gov and .mil) is public domain. However, the government frequently includes works on its websites which are copyrighted by someone else, and the U.S. government can even own copyright on works which are produced by others. In other words, some U.S. Federal websites can include works which are not in the public domain--check the copyright status before assuming something is public domain. Note also that this applies only to the U.S. Federal government. Most state governments retain the copyright on their work (California being a notable exception).

Did you check the copyright status of all the material you included? I looked on the site and could not find it. Originally, I was going to nominate the article for WP:DYK as I thought the information was interesting. But once I saw the questionable copyright status, plus DYK would never include a copy-paste rather than a written article, I dropped the idea of nominating it. --Mattisse 16:28, 24 September 2007 (UTC)

Did you read the first comment in the history where I state it is US Gov PD? That means I did check. Did you read the first paragraph on this page where I point out where the author is identified? You looked on what site? You could not find the title page of the electronic book? It's at the top of the index. It's the page with the title and author. (SEWilco 21:26, 25 September 2007 (UTC))

Additional Information for the Article

Reply for Bathhouse

Photographs

Attribution

Another Arkansas NHL Article where long passages without quotation were added

Warning - file contains malicious code

plagerism of this article

Revising the article anew

Options for block quotations

Develop two versions of this article?

Is this now an Edit War? Let's discuss first

Alternative sources

Restoration of quoting to credit Harrison

Harrison text as a Primary source

detailed edits in process

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