CelestiaProject / CelestiaContent

Data files for Celestia space simulator
Other
35 stars 21 forks source link

Review of extras-standard #144

Open ajtribick opened 6 months ago

ajtribick commented 6 months ago

Splitting out from #138

Looking through extras-standard:

Erring on the side of caution, I think we need to remove all of these add-ons, with the possible exceptions of galileo and interstellar-objects.

SevenSpheres commented 6 months ago

I think many of the old spacecraft models were contributed by their authors, which would imply them being released under the GPL.

The interstellar object trajectories are taken from Celestia Origin (as are most of the updated spacecraft trajectories).

ajtribick commented 6 months ago

Ok the models in shroxmars have been discussed and are apparently ok to distribute as CC-BY-4.0 (https://github.com/CelestiaProject/Celestia/pull/831)

The other Shrox add-ons are not discussed there and are still suspect.

ajtribick commented 5 months ago

Have contacted Douglas Schrock regarding their 3ds models

DaveBowman2001 commented 5 months ago

I think this one needs to be replaced, probably with https://nasa3d.arc.nasa.gov/detail/jpl-vtad-cassini as a starting point. Unfortunately it looks like the NASA 3D archive does not have a Huygens model.

Wdym? Huygens is available on the same source link as Cassini, only attached to it IMG_20240117_202104

DaveBowman2001 commented 5 months ago

iss - this appears to be ultimately derived from an orbiter add-on from a now-offline website. From the archived copy of the website the description is as follows: "Project Alpha is a freeware addon which I created that comes default in Orbiter. Therefore I see no reason for Orbiter developers to contact me regarding the use of models and textures from Project Alpha. If you do use them please remember to mention the author of Project Alpha in the credits." - without anything more specific than that it is

If I understood this correctly, we can still keep Project Alpha's ISS to the default installation of Celestia, as he did indicate to credit him as an author if someone used them (i.e. his last sentence above highlighted)

Here's a screenshot of the current ISS.ssc file as of November 2022 IMG_20240117_203203

DaveBowman2001 commented 5 months ago

mir - no idea where this came from, the relevant commit is 6905ce2 but has no information there.

Initially I thought this was also Bob Hundley's work due to the overall body's similarity with this image, but the commit above could possibly hint that it was made by Chris Laurel himself?