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verelo 10 hours ago

Great initiative.

However I am curious about the "NO USE FRANCE" text at the end of this article. Is this a licence issue or something? Would love it if someone with insight would be able to comment!

jjmarr 10 hours ago | parent | next [-]

It might be because there's a person in the photo, and France is very strict on photographing people.

https://commons.wikimedia.org/wiki/Commons:Country_specific_...

In terms of the formatting/brevity, Reuters was originally a wire service. They'd cover news in foreign locations and send it by telegraphic wire to local newspapers that would license the content.

Telegraphs charged by the word and didn't have letter case. Cryptic in-band signals like "NO USE FRANCE" are a relic of that time.

Since the link OP posted is to the B2B part of Reuters, I'm assuming they still haven't modernized this system.

GuB-42 9 hours ago | parent [-]

It doesn't seem to be about photographing people, other pictures don't feature people and still have the "NO USE FRANCE" tag. It seems like all pictures by Chris Jung have the "NO USE FRANCE" tag.

My best guess is that Chris Jung has some kind of an exclusivity contract for publishing in France. Looking at his website, he publishes in "Paris Match", a French magazine, so it may be related.

jjmarr 9 hours ago | parent [-]

That makes more sense.

iyaiyadino 6 hours ago | parent | prev [-]

In France solar panel are mandatory over car park. https://www.theguardian.com/world/2022/nov/09/france-to-requ...