I don’t buy images. Never. I take my own pictures. Or I use free images released under a Creative Commons License. Or in the ‘public domain’. Some image databases offer their photographs under their own licenses, equivalent to the free licenses, as long as I do not make their images publicly available through another image database. I accept that as well. And as open-source licenses do, too, some ‘picture’ licenses impose certain duties on me. Thus, I need a picture credit page:
For example, sometimes I have to say where I got the image, who its photographer is, and what license it is under. The right place to fulfill such conditions is a page for image credits1:
Solution
A Table For Image Credits
- Create a page ‘Image Credits’ and include it on your site like your imprint
- Install the plugin TablePress.
- Create a table with the 4 columns ‘Picture’, ‘Download & Licensing’, ‘License’, and ‘Attribution’.
- Include this table in your page Image Credits by using the TablePress shortcode.
A New Image Reference
- Add a new row to the image reference table.
- Concerning the first column ‘IMAGE’
- open the media library, click on the new image and remember its ID, which is displayed in the browser URL.
- enter the already-known short code
wrong image data
.
- In the second column, link an appropriate text to the same image in the database. If the target page does not contain a licensing statement, add a second link in the same column that leads to the licensing statement of the picture database.
- In the third column, link the license name to the license text, preferably in the version from the image database.
- In the fourth column, enter all the information that the license requires.
Background
First things first: The WordPress plugin TablePress is actively maintained and is — according to the file readme.txt — GPL‑2.0 licensed. So this is a ‘flawless’ piece of Open-Source software.
Finally, the more complex aspects: Why do we need an image credit at all? Formally, we don’t! We just need to fulfill in some way every requirement of the license that has been linked to the image we are using. But the license compliance itself is non-negotiable for the sincere user: either she respects the terms of the license, or she does not use the image.2
That’s why I make things simple for myself: I enter every image into my table for image credits according to the marked pattern. Even those, where I am free to say nothing — like with PxHere pictures. And if I follow the pattern, nothing slips through my hands either. Hopefully.
To that end, I’ve written myself a set of short codes that make it a snap to add a new image to the table. I will gladly pass on these codes on request.
And how does this …
… support our migration to bootScore? Well, once started with improving the image handling, a web designer will also notice the blurred ‘featured images’ of bootScore. She will try and refine solutions. And she may also tackle them with new HTML‑5 techniques. Because with that, a fancier image strategy combined with an integrated license fulfillment process and its own logo will really make sense. However, pictures bring colors to reading. So they should be integrated into a customized color concept. This post also contributes something to this topic.