it does directly affect them, either the license is enforceable, or it is not
It does not
directly affect them if content they don't use under the CC license is withdrawn.
no, that is your claim, I'd say the opposite is very clearly true.
Incorrect. You see it as being equivalent to that, but it's already been proven that's not the case, even if you feel otherwise.
An unenforceable license is as good as no license
"As good as" is not the same thing as "actually being." You can say that "A is as good as B," but that does not mean that "A is B." Hence the aforementioned "already been proven."
This has not been "established."
Except it has been. When someone says that something is "as good as" something else, that implicitly acknowledges that it's not
actually that other thing.
You simply don't accept the reality of the situation.
On the contrary, the people arguing otherwise are not accepting the reality of the situation, since they're arguing that if something is "as good as" another thing, then it must actually
be that other thing, which is self-evidently not the case. Otherwise there wouldn't be a distinction to be made between "as good as" and "actually being."
If CC is not enforceable, it is dead, and that is a really big problem.
It's still "enforceable" per se, it's just that it has no provision explicitly denying that content can be "withdrawn."
@Alzrius I think you're on an island by yourself in your argument because the rest of us don't believe it to be something that will ever be a reality.
Which is what we all said about WotC trying to revoke the OGL before they went and tried to revoke the OGL.
But as I said before, that's not the point. The point is that WotC's threat about revoking the OGL was always legally dubious, as dubious as someone claiming they can "withdraw" content from the CC; and yet that dubious claim (which never resulted in any legal filings) was still enough to shake the entire industry; hence why any ideas that the CC is somehow a better/safer license because of its legal specifics are similarly misplaced, because those specifics don't matter any more than they did for the OGL in the face of a bogus threat when it comes from a huge corporation.
I mean, sure anyone can sue anyone for anything in the U.S., but it doesn't take very much legal acumen to rebut the level of idiocy that would be if Wizards attempted it. Sure send a C&D and watch people tell you to naughty word off. But they won't file a lawsuit because it would be non-sensical and moronic.
They didn't have to file a lawsuit over "revoking" the OGL to have a serious impact on the industry, is my point. There's no reason that's any less true for the CC.