danbala said:It is my understanding that certain materials in every d20 book are public domain, that is, the author makes no claim to copyright ownership. Typically, these are the "crunchy bits" spells, feats, classes, etc. This is delineated at the beginning of the manuscript.
danbala said:
If you download the PDF (say from Kazaa) and then keep only the "open" material (and even perhaps distribute this material to your group along with the Liscence) have you violated any laws? Would it be legal to download PDFs, create your own campaing book of crunchy bits, and then send this (along with the liscence) to whomever you chose?
Janos Audron said:
But if you support $500 piracy, why don't you support 10 books piracy?
The oft-repeated "stay out of other people's business" defense is, of course, nonsense. We live together in a society, of which we are all members. When other members of the society are doing something which negatively affects us in the aggregate, it is our responsibility to get into each others' business, most especially in situations where the law of the land cannot realistically see the crime being committed or do anything about it.
Nothing in a d20 book is "public domain". Not one bit. Nada. What is delineated is material that obeys the Open Gaming License.danbala said:It is my understanding that certain materials in every d20 book are public domain, that is, the author makes no claim to copyright ownership. Typically, these are the "crunchy bits" spells, feats, classes, etc. This is delineated at the beginning of the manuscript.
Some of it is licensed under the Open Gaming License. That material can be copied out and distributed along with your own update of the OGL (by following the legal directions in the OGL included with it). If this is all you are doing, (and you are updating the license), go to town. But if you are just passing the PDF along untouched, you are "pirating" the product.If you download the PDF (say from Kazaa) and then keep only the "open" material (and even perhaps distribute this material to your group along with the Liscence) have you violated any laws? Would it be legal to download PDFs, create your own campaing book of crunchy bits, and then send this (along with the liscence) to whomever you chose?
Where are you going with this? Because software companies have to overcharge (by 30% than they want to) due to piracy, that piracy is okay there? Every business adds some percentage to the cost of their products to make up for losses (whether they be theft, damage, loss, etc). Software companies just use a higher percentage because they know if will be pirated. But just because they anticipate said piracy does nothing to justify doing it.DocMoriartty said:This is a bit off track but most software companies (at least the mid-sized to large ones) have as much as a 30% margin built into the price of their software to contend with the loss of sales from software piracey.
Because of this I have heard people say they are willing top pirate software as opposed to other products just because they are already getting bent over in the price area.
A musician sits on a street corner playing some music. You walk by. Do you have to tip him? No. But, it sounds like you are the type who would. Bless you and everyone like you. But no, there is nothing in the license that says you have to pay for OGC.Clefton Twain said:It was my understanding that, yeah, you can use, reproduce, and pass along anything that is open gaming content. But that doesn't necessarily mean that you should be able to get that information for free, right?
Clefton Twain said:It was my understanding that, yeah, you can use, reproduce, and pass along anything that is open gaming content. But that doesn't necessarily mean that you should be able to get that information for free, right?