Greg Benage
Legend
I don’t think the lawyers gloss over the intricacies, uncertainties, and practical difficulties. It’s the never-ending stream of laymen that do that. [emoji6]
In my view this is bad advice. The whole of the SRD text is copyright WotC. Many 3PPs are publishing work that either directly copies SRD text, or is manifestly derivative of it and hence (without a licence) may infringe WotC's copyrights.According to the article, no you don't. Her point is that a lot of the open content could not be protected by copyright in the first place. With the license gone, you can use that, and then some, as the license is no longer binding.
Looking at UK cases on non-literal infringement such as Herbert v Ravenscroft The Spear case and the Baigent & Leigh v Random House (Dan Brown) Da Vinci Code case, I'd be fairly confident in saying that in UK Copyright Law Torchbearer definitely falls on the Da Vinci Code side of the line, non-infringing, whereas the retro-clones fall on the Ravenscroft side, infringing. Worse, if they still contain any actual 3e SRD text then without the OGL they are literally infringing. It may well be possible to publish a mechanical clone of D&D in the fantasy genre without infringing copyrights, using only non-protected ideas & mechanics, but that's a distinctly tricky operation. For a start I think you'd want to do a kind of white room operation where the game was written without any copies of D&D on hand, to avoid literal infringement. Even then you could well take too much of the structure and expression of a D&D version. I think you really need to start with a kind of clean text describing a fantasy world/genre, no rules stuff, then add in rules mechanics at the end. As an academic it would be very interesting to see the court judgement on that!But far from ideal when you have the OGL & SRD.
Including just upthread!I don’t think the lawyers gloss over the intricacies, uncertainties, and practical difficulties. It’s the never-ending stream of laymen that do that. [emoji6]
That is no use to anyone. That is a variation of the classic "well you should not start from here when giving directions "According to the article, no you don't. Her point is that a lot of the open content could not be protected by copyright in the first place. With the license gone, you can use that, and then some, as the license is no longer binding.
In my view this is bad advice. The whole of the SRD text is copyright WotC. Many 3PPs are publishing work that either directly copies SRD text, or is manifestly derivative of it and hence (without a licence) may infringe WotC's copyrights.
I'm not saying it's impossible to publish non-licensed stuff that is D&D-ish in flavour, but the situation is more complex than you suggest.
Here's a relevant post from S'mon:
As I understand, injunctions typically require some sort of irreparable harm that can't be compensated monetarily, so it's pretty unlikely in this case.
This is so ridiculous.That letter gives me SO MUCH HOPE.
Also the Class Action against Wizards would probably be amazing if Wizards pressed the matter, based on the letter.
You do understand that I am a small third party publisher right? And also a freelance writer for A5e?This is so ridiculous.
I created a narrative in my head that you are the villains now it's up to you to prove you've changed or you deserve defeat and public humiliation.
Kit Walsh at the Electronic Frontier Foundation has written an article on the OGL.