May be used freely, although ECB's banknote image restrictions may apply. My interpretation of those rules is that as long as at most 1/3rd of the banknote is visible, no SPECIMEN texts need to be added. The irregular shapes of the visible banknotes (because of the coins on them) makes the contiguous surface areas significantly smaller, thus making it harder to abuse this image somehow. At least it'd be pretty damn hard to print a portion of this image and fool people into thinking that the printout is a real banknote, which I believe is the intention of the regulations. If you have differing opinions, feel free to use the talk pages.
ECB decisions ECB/2003/4 and ECB/2003/5Use permitted by the ECB subject to the conditions set forth in decisions ECB/2003/4 and ECB/2003/5 and "as long as reproductions in advertising or illustrations cannot be mistaken for genuine banknotes".falsefalse
The image above depicts a euro banknote. This design is copyrighted by the European Central Bank (ECB), and its use is permitted by ECB, subject to the conditions set forth in decisions ECB/2003/4 and ECB/2003/5 of 20 March 2003 and "as long as reproductions in advertising or illustrations cannot be mistaken for genuine banknotes".
Warning: One or more elements in this file are protected by copyright
Some parts of this file (Euro coins) are not fully free but believed to be de minimis for this work. Derivatives of this file which focus more on the non-free element(s) may not qualify as de minimis and may be copyright violations. As a direct consequence, cropped versions of this file may require a review of their copyright status.
Public domainPublic domainfalsefalse
I, the copyright holder of this work, release this work into the public domain. This applies worldwide. In some countries this may not be legally possible; if so: I grant anyone the right to use this work for any purpose, without any conditions, unless such conditions are required by law.
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