dave2008
Legend
It is more pragmatism than optimism. I see no value in burning things before they should be set on fire.I'll hope you are right, but I cannot imagine a world where I get to wake up as optimistic as you appear to be.![]()
It is more pragmatism than optimism. I see no value in burning things before they should be set on fire.I'll hope you are right, but I cannot imagine a world where I get to wake up as optimistic as you appear to be.![]()
Please correct me if I'm wrong, but doesn't OGL1.0(a) already do what you suggest the new OGL should do?OGL 1.0(a) is a weak and out of date agreement. (...)
There must be a new agreement, whether that's ORC or Creative Commons or some good faith attempt at a new OGL by WOTC (and 1.2 is NOT a good faith attempt.) The new agreement must guarantee the licenses of already published works, and provide a perpetual, irrevocable, royalty free license for future works without draconian back doors such as the morality and severance clauses in 1.2.
I was not asking what scenario you envision could lead to WotC’s downfall. I was talking about our analogy. So basically WotC can only win here according to you, i.e. get what they wanted all along at minimal losses to them but large losses to the 3pp. Is that about correct?I never said that. But if you will, I speculate:
If WotC loses too much goodwill, they might get deperate and try to shoot again and again and again and lose even more. Which means, they try to sell bad game supplements and will lose more goodwill. Books remain on the shelves. New books tank. Good bye.
this can only be determined by a court at this time it seems. That is certainly what WotC promised back thenPlease correct me if I'm wrong, but doesn't OGL1.0(a) already do what you suggest the new OGL should do?
Thought the 1.2 only mentioned the 5.1 SRD. All the others are still in question.Yes, but they have already committed to that so I didn't include it. I guess we have to wait and see, but they said that was the plan in the OGL 1.2 FAQ. They are also planning to put more editions into CC per the FAQ.
We thought it did, until suddenly it didn't.Please correct me if I'm wrong, but doesn't OGL1.0(a) already do what you suggest the new OGL should do?
just to be clear, it failed in that everyone scattered into the winds instead of saying 'see you in court'. The license itself would probably prevail if anyone did.As @Snarf Zagyg pointed out (I think in a different thread), this marks the first time the original OGL has been put to the test. And it has, unfortunately, failed that test. The OGL should make it crystal clear that there is no backing out or "de-authorizing." It should explain in detail how sub-licenses work. Et cetera.
The license hasn't been deauthorized so there's nothing to go to court over yet.just to be clear, it failed in that everyone scattered into the winds instead of saying 'see you in court'. The license itself would probably prevail if anyone did.
Also, I do not want them to leave 1.0a alone, I want them to fix the flaws that were discovered and rlease a 1.0b that fixes them. Also, I am not sure they are flaws in the original design, it is more that contract wording has been updated since the license was written, so it is now common practice to now include the word irrevocable whereas in 2000 that was not the case (perpetual implied irrevocable, because you cannot be revocable and perpetual).
that is not how this works. WotC has to be the one suing, everyone else simply needs to keep on using itThe license hasn't been deauthorized so there's nothing to go to court over yet.