Hello, I am lawyer with a PSA: almost everyone is wrong about the OGL and SRD. Clearing up confusion.

Hard to say. I'll probably write a longer-ish article about this in the future, but when you're looking at corporation v. corporation (even if one is "the little guy,") the rules get a little scrambled from the old-fashioned, "Little guys like juries, corporations and soulless dead eyed elves like bench trials."

Large corporations with a lot of money can afford a lot of ... stuff. Not just the bestest (and mostest) attorneys, but also all the small things to give them an edge. A rapid response team of associates following the trial (and immediate transcripts every day). A jury consultant team to make sure that you not only get an optimal jury, but that you match the themes you are developing in the trial for that particular jury- down to each individual juror. And so on.

In short, there are a lot of strategic decisions that would go into this (if it gets to that point). But there is no reason I would necessarily expect a bench trial. Heck, we still don't know what Hasbro's claims would be, if they were to file suit.
I don’t think people that don’t have access to Big Law and money to spend understand how much can be done in a legal matter. I use Latham and Jones Day. Have used Kirkland a lot in the past. One phone call and I have a small army of expensive but dedicated and generally really good lawyers. And they are a big enough practice that they tend to have good specialists. And if they don’t have the right lawyer themselves, they know where to find the right one.

Couple that with me, who is not stupid enough to pay for all the advice and help and then not listen to them and I can get a lot of legal work done really quickly.
 

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pemerton said:
The spectrum I work on is Australia > the UK and NZ > Canada > the US. (Where ">" means "is more formalistic than".)
When you write ">" do you mean that the formalism is strictly greater or greater than or equal? Also, is the set of all possible legal system a fully ordered or just partially ordered set? :unsure:
If it's OK, I'll actually use this example to illustrate some interpretive reasoning.

One of the terms between the ">" operators is the UK and NZ. The UK and NZ are distinct jurisdictions. Thus, one of the places in the spectrum as I've presented it has two jurisdictions in it. Which must mean that they occupy the same place in the spectrum. Which in turn implies that ">" means "strictly greater than" rather than "greater than or equal to".

And see how that reasoning does not require taking evidence from me about my authorial intention. It can be done purely on the basis of the text.

At least for this rather formalistic Australian, that's an example of how the interpretation of legal texts proceeds. (Except of course in non-toy examples, the considerations that generate the implications are often more complicated.)

Here's an example with more complexity - I thought of it yesterday and have been waiting for a context in which it's remotely apposite to post:

Imagine a legal provision that Anyone operating a motorised conveyance must be licensed to do so.

It's hard to see how a car driver is not caught by that provision.

It's hard to see how a push bike rider would be caught by that provision.

But what about a person riding an e-bicycle, with the electric motor turned off?

Or (more fanciful) what about a person on a scooter, whose feet are in straps on the scooter a bit like a sailboard, who is wearing a jetpack that propels them along at quite a speed?​

Hopefully you can see that the first puzzle case puts pressure on operates - the conveyance is a motorised one in the abstract, but the motor is off, so is the rider operating a motorised conveyance?

While the second case puts pressure on motorised - the scooter does not itself have a motor (that's strapped to the rider), so is the rider who is being propelled by a motor operating a motorised conveyance?

The puzzles cannot be answered in the abstract (which doesn't stop plenty of students under examination trying to do so!). You would need more context - What else does the framework of rules say to help establish and confine the meanings of these words in this instrument? What purpose is the provision supposed to serve, within the overall regulatory logic of the instrument? etc.

When I talk about the importance of context to legal outcomes, this is the sort of thing I'm talking about. Speculating about how another important sort of context - ie how a litigation strategy might be developed to generate concessions from opponents and sympathy from a court - I leave to others who understand those things!
 




I woudn't say that it is moot. While I think it's great that a new - truly open - license is being created, as Ryan Dancey said in a recent interview, the real value of the OGL is not the license itself, but rather the fact that (most of) D&D is released under it.

Yep. The big step is creating a copyright-legal version "SRD" and then putting it out via ORC. We'll see if that happens.

joe b.
 



Are these other publishers going to jump aboard and support a new Pathfinder SRD? That would be amazing!

To be clear, I'm not saying the publishers listed in this announcement are going to do that, I am stating that the next big step is doing that. WotC used the OGL for a very long time to protect itself from others, just as much as others used it to protect themselves from WotC. The next big step will be creating an "SRD simulacrum".

joe b.
 


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