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The non-free use you're proposing is bascially a WP:DECORATIVE type of non-free use, and it's not really considered policy-compliant to use non-free images in list articles or in a list-, a gallery- or a table-like display per WP:NFLIST and WP:NFTABLE simply to show what one of a group of entries looks like. If the rationale you posted above ...
Fair use/non-free: You believe that the image meets the special conditions for non-free content, which exceptionally allow the use of unlicensed material, and you can provide an explicit non-free use rationale explaining why and how you intend to use it (example, see below for details).
If so, I send a brief thank-you message. If the image file size was on the small side, only then do I ask whether they have a bigger one. The final step I take is to send the photographer a message with a link to the Wikimedia Commons page and, if I have already inserted it into an article, the Wikipedia page.
Wikipedia:Example_requests_for_permission#What_not_to_ask_permission_for is blatantly erroneous. It makes it sound like solely GFDL images are usable in WP. In point of fact, there are multiple ways a person may release an image and it be used on WP. Here are just two examples besides the GFDL: Creative Commons-Attribution
If you're planning to do any shopping this Memorial Day weekend, it's a safe bet that you'll be asked for your email address when you get to the register.Capturing customer emails at checkout is ...
Refresh the page to allow the camera permission prompt to reappear or manually toggle the permission. 1. Tap the 'aA' icon . 2. Tap Website Settings. 3. Under the 'Allow [website name] to Access' section, tap Camera and select either Ask or Allow.
If the photographer's identity is unclear (for instance, if an image was uploaded stating the photographer's name and claiming a free license, but the image cannot be found on the web), ask them to confirm that the image is theirs. In any case, ask them to confirm the claimed license. For CC BY-SA, point out the points mentioned above.
eBay announced on Dec. 20 that the online marketplace will be required to collect Social Security numbers -- or Individual Tax Identification numbers -- from all sellers who sell product (over the