Well he's also claiming to be an authority on the matter.
He's apparently an IP lawyer. His website doesn't present him as some sort of leader in the field. We have IP lawyers here, too. WotC had IP lawyers when the OGL was created.
Well he's also claiming to be an authority on the matter.
If, and I say if it turns out that the OGL is unenforceable, it will be in a way that doesn't allow WotC to restrict how you use the licensed material
It's allowing the use of copyrighted material, in exchange for not doing other things that you would normally have the right to do, such as referring to a monster as a "Beholder".With respect, the OGL is not restricting use. It is allowing use of material that would otherwise be restricted by copyright.
It's allowing the use of copyrighted material, in exchange for not doing other things that you would normally have the right to do, such as referring to a monster as a "Beholder".
The exact boundaries between Trademarks, Copyrights and Fair Use are kinda muddled when it comes to such cases, which is why WotC decided to make obeying their PI restrictions a condition for the OGL, instead of leaving it up to some unpredictable future court decision.I don't see how you;d have that right. You could call a dragon a dragon. And a zombie a zombie, because those terms existed before the game - there is prior art. But a beholder isn't a thing out of a prior mythology. It was created by people at TSR, out of whole cloth. You don't get to take that as your own.
I don't see how you;d have that right. You could call a dragon a dragon. And a zombie a zombie, because those terms existed before the game - there is prior art. But a beholder isn't a thing out of a prior mythology. It was created by people at TSR, out of whole cloth. You don't get to take that as your own.
Yes exactly! But media companies like to treat them as if they're the same, hence the muddling effect.No, they aren't.
Trademarks and copyrights are completely different things.
So, his very first paragraphs has an astounding error:
No, the OGL and SRD tell the public what material was protected under normal copyright, and what was usable under the OGL,which does have some restrictions. It says so, right on WotC's SRD page. There is no public domain involved at all.
This phenomenally large error indicates to me... that we really shouldn't be paying attention to this person. Why are we reading what this guy writes?
He's claiming the OGL is an unenforceable document -that bears watching. Especially as he seems to be an experienced IP attorney and looks to be throwing bombs at WoTC.
This brings to mind a recent discussion I had on legislative processes. The interesting thing that was presented in that discussion is that lawyers approach a problem/issue very differently than how a scientist (engineer, etc) does. And this has significant impact on our judicial system.But I am a DM, and that post looks an awful lot like a player talking very fast to try and slide some clearly fallacious argument past me.
Law doesn't work like that. (And hopefully someone with expertise in this fields can correct and expand upon this; @S'mon ?) Instead law is a system based (I think) Argumentation Theory. This is where one person/side/party makes a premise, and then finds support for that. And "fairness" or "justice" is obtained by having each side represented by legal experts and the side with the stronger legal argument (is supposed to) win. (Not that I have a better system, but evidence of the flaws in such a system are abundant.)
What this means is that one side has a view or opinion, something they want to be true, and then they find evidence to support what a scientist would consider a conclusion. Rather than starting with an open mind or an observed issue and then trying to determine what the results should be, the answer is pre-supposed.
Sure - but to win, you also be able to address and defeat any counter arguments that are raised.
One reason that legal advice is priviliged (kept confidential) is that lawyers need to be able to tell clients about weaknesses in their case, without that discussion giving the other side's lawyers ideas. If a lawyer's advice to his client could be used against his client, he would only ever tell the client what the client wanted to hear. Bad lawyers already do this, since they reckon the client will give them more money that way... no need to give them an excuse.![]()
I have never seen anything like these posts emanate from an "experienced IP attorney!" Maybe he is, but he certainly wouldn't be my first choice for representation. Whereas Hasbro lawyers seem to know their stuff pretty well from everything I've ever seen - remember Hasbro is a BIG company with a lot of IP interests to defend. This is not TSR; they can afford good-quality in-house counsel.