Hi Andy,
Thanks for the clarification and I appreciate the time you've taken to respond. I see your point, but I think that in truth you don't really like the OGL. You prefer some other kind of license arrangement that doesn't currently exist and you are hoping people will adhere to that even while you use the OGL.
I understand that this is just your personal opinion, but let's say that it was the official WotC stance (and I am not claiming that it is), just to see where this leads.
1. WotC releases a book that clearly states that I am free to copy and redistribute most of it, and even profit from doing so if I want to.
2. I buy the book, and part of my consideration for doing so is this statement.
3. I copy and redistribute most of the book just like WotC says I can, by accepting WotC's licensing agreement as stated in the book.
4. WotC tells me that I am acting immorally and suggests that while I don't have to legally, I should voluntarily cease and desist on moral grounds.
This is a clear case of bait and switch and in my opinion it would be clearly unethical for WotC to take this position. If WotC doesn't like the terms of the OGL then they should either work on a revised license or be more conservative in their declarations of open content. I mean...they created the license in the first place, right?
Thanks for the clarification and I appreciate the time you've taken to respond. I see your point, but I think that in truth you don't really like the OGL. You prefer some other kind of license arrangement that doesn't currently exist and you are hoping people will adhere to that even while you use the OGL.
I understand that this is just your personal opinion, but let's say that it was the official WotC stance (and I am not claiming that it is), just to see where this leads.
1. WotC releases a book that clearly states that I am free to copy and redistribute most of it, and even profit from doing so if I want to.
2. I buy the book, and part of my consideration for doing so is this statement.
3. I copy and redistribute most of the book just like WotC says I can, by accepting WotC's licensing agreement as stated in the book.
4. WotC tells me that I am acting immorally and suggests that while I don't have to legally, I should voluntarily cease and desist on moral grounds.
This is a clear case of bait and switch and in my opinion it would be clearly unethical for WotC to take this position. If WotC doesn't like the terms of the OGL then they should either work on a revised license or be more conservative in their declarations of open content. I mean...they created the license in the first place, right?