Obrysii said:
So after reading this thread and the GSL, I have to ask something.
What is the benefit to a fellow publisher to publish material using the 4e rules? This whole thing seems entirely too restrictive. If I were a fellow publisher, I'd create my own rules, similar but dissimilar enough, to 4e instead of use the 4e rules and GSL.
While the GSL may be altered at WotC's whim, it is a fairly certain bet that it won't be drastically altered for years, and that adhering to it and working with WotC will allow you to reference their books, publish compatible products, and advertise them as such - all great advantages.
Now, I THINK you can do all of that under Fair Use too. But it's more risky. So the advantages I see in the GSL, for a publisher, are:
A) It allows you to publish D&D-compatible products in relative legal safety.
B) It allows you to use WotC's formats, which will assist making your products appealing to the readership.
The disadvantages are:
A) In case the safe-haven fails, WotC can punish you much more severely, with claims over their legal costs, the requirement to destroy your stock, and so on.
B) By publishing content under the GSL, you are restricting your ability to later publish it under the OGL even if you or WotC terminate the GSL.
C) By changing the SRD (e.g. adding "Druid" to it), WotC may make currently compatible products incompatible. Unlike changes to the licesne itself, this I reckon to be more common and likely, a more relevant concern.
D) You are limited in the range of products you can publish - you better stay away from any setting involving the real world, you may not publish a MM where Demons are founded on the Christian or Mesopotemian mythology, you can't make software products, and so on.
E) When the GSL will be terminated, you will be forced to destroy your current stock and stop selling any and all GSL products. This is "when", since eventually it will.
Talath said:
I think people are looking at this through cynical eye-glasses. Sure, the GSL is restrictive, but honestly, do you think WotC would approve a license that forced 3pps to modify their published works if WotC happens to use something similar, or similarly named? That's counter-intuitive to their aims. Setting ground rules is fine, but setting up loopsholes to screw 3pps? Thats nonsense. I'm sure this will be clarified.
I hope you are right.
Brown Jenkin said:
For the US jurisdiction is easy. Section 19 limits all court cases to the state or federal courts based in King County, Washington State with no jury option available.
I thought a jury be peers was an inalienable right. Shows how much I know about law...