Jack Daniel
Legend
And while we're talking about potential grammar minutiae, consider also that the words "System Reference Document" and the abbreviation "SRD" are always used in the singular as well. There have been several SRDs, and the one that 1.1 is referencing is always stated to be the most-recent one (I believe 5.1 is the most recent, right?).
And in addition to that, something called the "System Reverence Document (draft version)" that has a copyright of 1999, 2000 has also had all it's Open Game Content released by a 3rd party publisher and appeared in Section 15's released under the OGL 1.0 license. That is again technically not the same as a "System Reference Document" as used in the 1.1 language.
There is much lack of specificity.
joe b.
That seems to be covered under the definitions of Licensed and Unlicensed Content. They're trying to kill off the concept of Open Game Content and instead say that the 5.1 SRD is Licensed Content, and anything else that has been released as official D&D anything by WotC or a predecessor or successor (so that includes TSR) is now Unlicensed Content. The old SRDs would fall under the Unlicensed umbrella if this theory were to pan out.
Of course it all still hinges on the circular logic of their being able to unilaterally deauthorize 1.0(a) under its own section 9 by updating 1.0(a) via section 9 which they claim to have just deauthorized…