BryonD
Hero
I think that is kinda a red herring arguement.jgbrowning said:This is because they don't understand the difference between OPEN and FREE. The only OGC released that was intended to be free is the OGC that was released free by the publisher. Every other bit of OGC was released as OPEN.
Someone else can take OPEN and turn it into FREE, but that's obviously not what any creator intended through using the liscense, unless the creator made the OGC FREE to begin with.
People may try to argue otherwise, but intent is clear and obvious. If it was made FREE it was intended to be FREE: if it was only made OPEN it was intended to be OPEN. What the next person down the line does with that OPEN material is up to them. The license gives that power to the next person, it doesn't make anything FREE and it never will. Making something FREE is only an individual's decision and not an expectation/requirement/expected outcome of the license.
Yes, it is 100% true. I think people do not understand the difference between OGC and public domain material. Some do not understand that, unlike public domain, the publisher retains 100% ownership of all of their material regardless of its status as either open or IP. All the OGL grants is the priviledge to re-publish OGC. And this is a big important difference and truly understanding it may sway some people'e perspective.
But it is ultimately irrelevant. As you said, the OGL gives the power to the next person.
When an author puts the OGL on something, then their intent with regard to OGC is no more meaningful than anyone else who correctly uses the license. It can even be less meaningful. Ultimately, whoever elects to publish the material in the LEAST restrictive manner is the one whose intent trumps everyone else.
Obviously, you have clearly acknowledged this. So I'm not trying to argue that. But I think this point is significant and pretty much makes your point about author's intent go away.
Now there you are 100% correct.Obligations? The only obligations of the OGL are to follow the license properly. If you're referring to something else, you should be more clear.
I agree that >50% of the pro wiki crowd simply wants someone else to do the work and give the results to them. There is nothing redeemable in that position.