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File:Dachau cold water immersion.jpg: Difference between revisions

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The photo is in the public domain in the U.S. and does not need a free use rationale, but here is one for doubters.
The photo is in the public domain in the U.S. and does not need a free use rationale, but here is one for doubters.
{{Non-free use rationale| Article = Nazi human experimentation
{{Non-free use rationale| Article = Nazi human experimentation
| Description = "Forced cold water immersion experiment claimed to be at Dachau concentration camp presided over by Professor Holzlohner (left) and Dr Rascher (right). The subject (a prisoner who was forced to participate) is wearing a Luftwaffe garment. Note the floating blocks of ice."
| Description = "Forced cold water immersion experiment claimed to be at Dachau concentration camp presided over by Professor Holzlohner (left) and Dr [Sigmund] Rascher (right). The subject (a prisoner who was forced to participate) is wearing a Luftwaffe garment. Note the floating blocks of ice."
| Source = Taken from: Hanauske-Abel, Hartmut M. "Not a Slippery Slope or Sudden Subversion: German Medicine and National Socialism in 1933." ''BMJ: British Medical Journal'' 313(7070): 1453-1463. 7 December 1996. The journal does not claim ownership of the copyright.
| Source = Taken from: Hanauske-Abel, Hartmut M. "Not a Slippery Slope or Sudden Subversion: German Medicine and National Socialism in 1933." ''BMJ: British Medical Journal'' 313(7070): 1453-1463. 7 December 1996. The photograph was published in [https://books.google.com/books?id=5kkEAAAAMBAJ&lpg=PA81 "Human laboratory animals"]. ''Life'' magazine, 22(8), 24 February 1947, pp. 81–84.
| Portion = All
| Portion = All
| Low_resolution = Yes
| Low_resolution = Yes
| Purpose = To illustrate practices of human experimentation.
| Purpose = To illustrate Nazi medical experiments
| Replaceability = Non-reproducible historic image with no free replacement, illustrating the subject of prisoner abuse with cold water immersion in the [[Holocaust]] article. The German government commissioned the picture and owned the copyright. All Nazi era copyrights were seized by the Allies and are public domain in the US. according to the US National ARCHIVES. see [http://www.archives.gov/research/captured-german-records/foreign-records-seized.html US government statement on captured German records]
| Replaceability = Non-reproducible historic image with no free replacement, illustrating the subject of prisoner abuse with cold water immersion in the [[Holocaust]] article. The German government commissioned the picture and owned the copyright. All Nazi era copyrights were seized by the Allies and are public domain in the US. according to the US National ARCHIVES. see [http://www.archives.gov/research/captured-german-records/foreign-records-seized.html US government statement on captured German records]



Revision as of 03:53, 7 October 2017

The photo is in the public domain in the U.S. and does not need a free use rationale, but here is one for doubters.

Non-free media information and use rationale true for Nazi human experimentation
Description

"Forced cold water immersion experiment claimed to be at Dachau concentration camp presided over by Professor Holzlohner (left) and Dr [Sigmund] Rascher (right). The subject (a prisoner who was forced to participate) is wearing a Luftwaffe garment. Note the floating blocks of ice."

Source

Taken from: Hanauske-Abel, Hartmut M. "Not a Slippery Slope or Sudden Subversion: German Medicine and National Socialism in 1933." BMJ: British Medical Journal 313(7070): 1453-1463. 7 December 1996. The photograph was published in "Human laboratory animals". Life magazine, 22(8), 24 February 1947, pp. 81–84.

Article

Nazi human experimentation

Portion used

All

Low resolution?

Yes

Purpose of use

To illustrate Nazi medical experiments

Replaceable?

Non-reproducible historic image with no free replacement, illustrating the subject of prisoner abuse with cold water immersion in the Holocaust article. The German government commissioned the picture and owned the copyright. All Nazi era copyrights were seized by the Allies and are public domain in the US. according to the US National ARCHIVES. see US government statement on captured German records

Even if the Luftwaffe owns the copyright its use on Wikipedia is no doubt "fair use" for its historical purposes in illustrating war crimes.
Fair useFair use of copyrighted material in the context of Nazi human experimentation//en.wikipedia.org/wiki/File:Dachau_cold_water_immersion.jpgtrue

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current15:40, 31 January 2010Thumbnail for version as of 15:40, 31 January 2010300 × 201 (43 KB)Rockfang (talk | contribs)reduced size

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