Talk:Bryan Sharratt

Copyright concerns
While facts are not copyrightable, creative elements of presentation - including both structure and language - are. For an example of close paraphrasing in this article, consider the following, all from a single source: The source says:

The article says (bolding added to highlight exact duplication):

The source says:

The article says:

The source says:

The article says:

See also the Duplication Detector.

As this contributor is subject to a contributor copyright investigation, other sources he used may be closely paraphrased or copied as well.

Wikipedia's copyright policies require that the content we take from non-free sources, aside from brief and clearly marked quotations, be rewritten from scratch. So that we can be sure it does not constitute a derivative work, this article should be rewritten in the temporary space that is now linked from the article's front. The essay Close paraphrasing contains some suggestions for rewriting that may help avoid these issues. The article Wikipedia Signpost/2009-04-13/Dispatches, while about plagiarism rather than copyright concerns, also contains some suggestions for reusing material from sources that may be helpful, beginning under "Avoiding plagiarism".

If no rewrite is proposed, the article may be deleted or stubbed after a week. --Moonriddengirl (talk) 11:12, 30 September 2011 (UTC)