Goodreads Librarians Group discussion
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How do you figure if an author photo is in the public domain?
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Lisa
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May 20, 2010 07:55PM

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To answer the more general question, unless it is from Wikipedia (or another site with similar licensing of photos), or somewhere that states that the photo is not copyrighted, it's probably NOT. Exceptions: a photo you yourself took or that the person who actually took gave you permission to use, or one of someone who is long dead, which is likely out of copyright. Dickens, for instance.

What do I say to give wikipedia credit, or is any photo there automatically free use?
Thanks!

I, the copyright holder of this work, hereby publish it under the following license [...:] You are free: to share – to copy, distribute and transmit the work
Unless a photo of a person* has a statement like this attached, you should assume that you don't have rights to share the photo.
* I had a long-winded digression here about photos of book covers, but that's not really relevant to photos of people.
I get a little frustrated with Wikimedia Commons' layout, because they almost always say "You must attribute the work in the manner specified by the author or licensor" and then don't provide a clear specification. Grr!
In this case, I would attribute this as original photo by Joel Levine, derivative work by Work permit, plus a link to that webpage.
