User talk:Polarpablo10

January 2010
Welcome to Wikipedia. Although everyone is welcome to contribute constructively to the encyclopedia, your addition of one or more external links to the page Brett Hull has been reverted. Your edit here was reverted by an automated bot that attempts to remove links which are discouraged per our external links guideline from Wikipedia. The external link you added or changed is on my list of links to remove and probably shouldn't be included in Wikipedia. I removed the following link(s): http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=6vFDLvDQ33o (matching the regex rule \byoutube\.com). If the external link you inserted or changed was to a media file (e.g. a sound or video file) on an external server, then note that linking to such files may be subject to Wikipedia's copyright policy and therefore probably should not be linked to. Please consider using our upload facility to upload a suitable media file. Video links are also strongly deprecated by our guidelines for external links, partly because they're useless to people with slow internet connections. If you were trying to insert an external link that does comply with our policies and guidelines, then please accept my creator's apologies and feel free to undo the bot's revert. However, if the link does not comply with our policies and guidelines, but your edit included other, constructive, changes to the article, feel free to make those changes again without re-adding the link. Please read Wikipedia's external links guideline for more information, and consult my list of frequently-reverted sites. For more information about me, see my FAQ page. Thanks! --XLinkBot (talk) 05:53, 10 January 2010 (UTC)

File:Brett Hull, top Right-Winger at Carnival de Quebec Pee Wee Tournament, 1977.jpg
Hi,

I see that you have again uploaded this image at Commons. Regretfully, I have to tell you that I will requesting its deletion. This is not meant as a personal slight against you, as I realize that you are trying to improve the Brett Hull article with it. However, given the image is obviously from a newspaper, the copyright of the image is held by either the photographer who took it, or the paper itself. That someone gave you a copy to scan does not give you copyright over the scanned copy. As a derivative work, its rights remains with the original copyright holder. Unless you can show that the copyright holder has explicitly released the image into the public domain or licensed it in a way compatible with Wikipedia, then Commons cannot host it, and we cannot use it in our articles. This is, unfortunately, an aspect of copyright confusion we often see with images. See also WP:NFCC. If you have any further questions, feel free to ask me either here or at my own talk page. Regards, Resolute 14:07, 30 October 2012 (UTC)