mamba
Legend
the fact that it was a single person, not 'people'?And people think this is unfair? And this is more evidence of how WotC is "at it again"? Did I miss something?
the fact that it was a single person, not 'people'?And people think this is unfair? And this is more evidence of how WotC is "at it again"? Did I miss something?
From what I hear (on this very thread) publishes have a separate license with WotC when they put things on DnD Beyond. This forum license has nothing to do with what a publisher puts on DnDBThe bigger deal, I think, is WOTC adding arbitration to settle disputes into the license. Arbitration almost always favors their client (in this case WOTC) and can be used in any lawsuit between the company with the TOS and a client who accepts it. In one recent case, someone died at one of the Disney resorts and Disney claimed it had to go through arbitration because the victim had signed up to Disney +. That ended up changing but not due to legal issues but to PR issues when that came to light.
IANAL and I don't know the full details of the arbitration clause in the DDB TOS but it might be used in a dispute, for example, between a publisher and WOTC if the publisher had signed up for a D&D Beyond account. That could get pretty nasty I think.
You can read it here:
Wizards — General Terms
www.dndbeyond.com
Section 19 and 20. You can opt out of this 30 days after you agree to it.
IANAL and I don't have the specific details but that might be an issue with the recent license update.
This is pretty boilerplate stuff for a social media website. If you post something on Reddit, Reddit owns it.
One person, who remembers back when WotC tried that stunt with OGL and who thought people might like to be aware of it. Even if it is, as people post "bog standard", I do not like the idea of them claiming ownership over other people's stuff.So, if I'm following this correctly, WotC has a term on the EULA that is pretty bog standard. They have this because in the past various companies and the like have had problems with people claiming that they stole ideas that were posted on that company's website. Like they websites that they own. Not in secret mind you. Websites they straight up tell you that they own.
And people think this is unfair? And this is more evidence of how WotC is "at it again"? Did I miss something?
They haven't. Read it again. If you're going to complain about something, make sure you understand what it is you're complaining about.I do not like the idea of them claiming ownership over other people's stuff.
Stop talking about real world politics. Oh, wait.All WotC learned from the OGL scandal was that they needed to be subtler in their attempts to exploit their customer base.
Even if the terms were likely there before the OGL stuff was even a rumor?One person, who remembers back when WotC tried that stunt with OGL and who thought people might like to be aware of it. Even if it is, as people post "bog standard", I do not like the idea of them claiming ownership over other people's stuff.
I do not like the idea of you talking out of your ass, yet here you are.One person, who remembers back when WotC tried that stunt with OGL and who thought people might like to be aware of it. Even if it is, as people post "bog standard", I do not like the idea of them claiming ownership over other people's stuff.
I do not like the idea of you talking out of your ass, yet here you are.
I do not like the idea of them claiming ownership over other people's stuff.