I read the Chris Cocks quote on the OGL mess a few times.
I know very few people will be happy with it. But it's actually a lot better than the usual "Mistakes were made," corporate speak.
He broke it down fairly well:
Yeah, I mean, that was about a year and a half ago. And that was a serious case of foot and mouth disease. From our perspective, we did it wrong. And we apologized.
Started with acknowledging that it was an error, and that they apologized. Okay, the "We" is mealy-mouthed, but still. "We were wrong, we are sorry," is actually unusual for corporations.
And I think we quickly made amends. I think where we were coming from on that whole thing, and the open game license for people who don't know, it was something that was established about 20ish years ago. That basically opens up the rule set and some of the core content for Dungeons and Dragons to create a lingua franca rule set and set of content for people to be able to play tabletop role playing games.
Then moves to an explanation as to what the OGL is. Okay.
So what we were trying to do is we were trying to evolve it because a document that was created in 2002 didn't foresee the rise of video games. It didn't foresee the rise of AI tools. It didn't foresee even things like content streaming. So our goal there was to try to protect an end user's ability to be able to make content and have fun and a creator's ability to create content and be able to make a living off of it while preventing kind of like a quick serve restaurant from using the D&D brand to sell tacos or a big video game company to be able to create a video game using the IP in a way that wasn't fair to us as the kind of quote unquote brand owners, or maybe do something that we didn't necessarily like with the brand or had content that was inappropriate.
This is probably the best explanation from their point of view. Worried about making money from the brand, or that people would damage the brand. The one thing that isn't said? Monetizing the brand. Which ... yep. As for AI tools? I think that was just thrown in there because AI is a thing now.
Which happens in, when you have tens of millions of users making content, I think we found a fair and equitable solution to it. You know, if anything, we embraced open source even more.
Weird segue, but ended by correctly saying that in the end, they went with an even better open source model. Although I don't think that they were all willingly embracing it, but you have to put some spin on it.
Overall, not that bad. I think there are a lot of people that won't be satisfied until he says, "It was all my fault because I'm a bad man and I am going to wear a hair shirt," but that's not going to happen.