NOT all ESRI imagery can be used. Their maps are probably copyrighted; and a background satellite view seen in an ESRI-product (which your municipality happens to use) is not necessarily cleared for usage, even though it happens to be shown in an ESRI prodcuct...
OpenStreetMap community
Everything #OpenStreetMap related is welcome: software releases, showing of your work, questions about how to tag something, as long as it has to do with OpenStreetMap or OpenStreetMap-related software.
OpenStreetMap is a map of the world, created by people like you and free to use under an open license.
Join OpenStreetMap and start mapping: https://www.openstreetmap.org.
There are many communication channels about OSM, many organized around a certain country or region. Discover them on https://openstreetmap.community
https://mapcomplete.org is an easy-to-use website to view, edit and add points (such as shops, restaurants and others)
https://learnosm.org/en/ has a lot of information for beginners too.
I live in Germany and I can select my official regional source right in the editor. Maybe it's a licencing issue but maybe it just wasn't added because no one ever brought up that it exists. I don't know where people suggest imagery sources to be added but maybe you could find that out and see if anyone's suggested it before and if not, suggest it yourself. Either way, you should be able to use that source without any legal issues, you're not redestributing it.
Imagery sources are tracked here: https://github.com/osmlab/editor-layer-index
We track how to load the aerial imagery (thus: the WMS-link), what license it has and where it is applicable. Only aerial imagery where we have permission for is allowed.
Updated my post. Looks like all ESRI imagery can be used!
@Showroom7561 you seem to be jumping to conclusions a bit there. Yes we are allowed to use Esri World Imagery in its two variants, there is no permission for anything else.
PS: there have been cases were Imagery was available in the Esri imagery referenced above that wasn't legally available for use to us elsewhere, in the cases that I tracked it 'suddenly' vanished after a while.
in its two variants
Maybe I'm misunderstanding, then. I didn't see it mention "two variants", and we'd only be talking about more recent images of the same satellite imagery.
ESRI does have their own editor for OSM, but I'm not sure if they use the same maps as the stock OSM editor or something else. Maybe I'll give it a try and see if we have access to more.
In either case, I have no plans to actually use my municipalities version for actual mapping (way too tedious, even to try), but it's so interesting to see these very recent images.
@Showroom7561 the two Esri imagery sources are the ones defined here https://github.com/osmlab/editor-layer-index/tree/gh-pages/sources/world
@Showroom7561 if you have a link to your municipalities imagery in some form I can give it a quick look.
Thank you. The link is here: https://durhamregion.maps.arcgis.com/apps/webappviewer/index.html
You have to zoom into "The Regional Municipality of Durham" (Ontario, Canada) and enable the "Durham Imagery" basemap.
A little more clarity: where you see "esri" in the lower right corner, the full image says "POWERED BY esri". In other words, ESRI is the platform, not the publisher. It's similar to use of Leaflet or OpenLayers for "powering" (providing the architecture to display) a rendering of OpenStreetMap tiles.
That's great observation.
@Showroom7561 while it doesn't look good (multiple orgs claiming rights in the imagery), I would suggest contacting the e-mail here https://maps.durham.ca/arcgis/rest/services/Cached_Basemaps/DurhamImage_UTM/MapServer and asking if they would be prepared to allow OSM access for tracing, the details would have to be hashed out naturally.
Well, this really was a deep-dive! I appreciate the help. I'll edit my OP again 😆