17 U.S.C. § 107
any and all material used
for educational purposes, where no money has been transferred, is exempt from
any copyright claims.
Private Lugnutz said:
"Many if not most vintage hand tools are often misidentified or misdated..."
I would fully agree with that statement, with the caveat that there are a
lot of sellers who do go to the trouble to research an item they are selling, clearly (in most cases) for the purpose of getting more money out of the item.
I am always a bit flattered to see items listed on ebay where the seller has obviously paid us a visit here looking for information about some widget he wants to sell.
Best example of the week of an ebay seller who's clearly been led to GarageJournal.com via Google. (You'll find my "Gilfillan" entry
here.)
On the flip side, gearhead's point is well taken: errors are repeated by other sellers, who pick up some snippet of misinformation and include it in the "description" text of their ad. I see that sort of thing quite often. Some of that misinformation is gleaned from other ad listings, some of it comes from various websites.
As an aside:
There was brief mention above of "Wikipedia". I am more than reluctant to cite "Wikipedia" as an information source in my
list, and will include it only when it seems to be the sole source of information.
The first iteration of the list was uploaded to a "Wikipedia" page, and remained there - unchanged - for well over a year. When I attempted to update it, I was "blocked" because the list contained URLs which (for reasons that were not explained and made absolutely no sense) were deemed "objectionable" or "offensive" according to the "Wikipedia" rule book.
When I asked for some explanation, I got no answer. I pulled the list off "Wikipedia". What you will find there now is the URL for the old list - the link to which is dead since NUTTSGT pulled the thread off earlier this week.
My only experience dealing with "Wikipedia" was certainly not what I had hoped for. On a "Wikipedia" page dealing with
a subject about which I am intimately acquainted, I went back and forth with one of their "editors" for some time about some trivial details. I don't know anything about working with HTML, and have no plans on learning, so I left it to them to use the information I'd provided. Unfortunately, they chose to use information from God-knows-where as opposed to that of Smitty Parratt, who is considered by anyone who knows the area to be the definitive source.
"Wikipedia" might be okay to use as an information source for a high-school report, but I certainly don't consider it to be 100% reliable, and after the experiences I've detailed above, I would probably never again attempt to make any sort of contribution to the site, monetary or otherwise.
Just my lousy two cents, as always.