AlDurrah3.jpg (300 × 180 pixels, file size: 25 KB, MIME type: image/jpeg)
This image is a faithful digitisation of a unique historic image, and the copyright for it is most likely held by the person who created the image or the agency employing the person. It is believed that the use of this image may qualify as non-free use under the Copyright law of the United States. Any other uses of this image, on Wikipedia or elsewhere, may be copyright infringement. See Wikipedia:Non-free content for more information. Please remember that the non-free content criteria require that non-free images on Wikipedia must not "[be] used in a manner that is likely to replace the original market role of the original copyrighted media." Use of historic images from press agencies must only be of a transformative nature, when the image itself is the subject of commentary rather than the event it depicts (which is the original market role, and is not allowed per policy). | |
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Description: Jamal and Muhammad al-Durrah just after the reported shooting, Gaza Strip, September 30, 2000
Source: Images that shook the world, BBC News, October 2, 2000.
Copyright: France 2
Rationale for Muhammad al-Durrah incident
Though this image is subject to copyright, its use is covered by the U.S. fair use laws, and the stricter requirements of Wikipedia's non-free content policies, because:
- It is an historically significant and iconic image.
- It is of lower resolution than the original. Copies made from it will be of inferior quality.
- The image has no monetary value that our use of it would affect.
- It has been widely distributed free of charge by the copyright holder.
- It is being used for informational purposes in an article about the event it depicts.
- The imagery and its historical significance are a key part of the story and the article would be significantly poorer without it.
- The significance of this image is that it was the last frame that France 2 broadcast of the shooting sequence, after which they announced that the boy had died, giving the impression that this frame shows his death. In fact, it does not. There was a further, final frame in which he is seen to move his arm, hand, and leg. It was the implication that this frame was the final one that has caused the controversy.
File history
Click on a date/time to view the file as it appeared at that time.
Date/Time | Thumbnail | Dimensions | User | Comment | |
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current | 02:39, 25 October 2004 | 300 × 180 (25 KB) | Alberuni (talk | contribs) | Jamal and Muhammad Al-Durrah being shot, Image 3; Khan Yunis, Gaza Strip; September 30, 2000 |
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File usage
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