And from a thousand other OGC contributors who have used it since its inception.
Referencing one source means you need to reference their sources. So, by referencing a Pathfinder book, you need to reference the SRD. There are precious few resources in the OGL that do not reference the SRD.
Yes, there's a lot you can use. But there's also restrictions, which is why Creative Commons was embraced by other companies. If you're not doing the d20 route and want nothing from the SRD, then there's little benefit gained from the OGL.
By asking WotC to use the OGL for 5E the assumption is they will release OGC, probably in the form of a 5E SRD. Has that not been understood?
It's understated. I think most people equate the OGL with the SRD, or want a new licence.
Again, there's two-three parts that WotC would need to release, a new System Document, a trademark licence, and potentially a new gaming licence. But I'm not sure most people understand how those works. Which is kinda required to get into the publishing side of things. (Which is what got me posting in this thread again, the comment that more than 0.1% of the fanbase would be interested in publishing their work.) Making content is great, but not many people are going to take that plunge.
Since now seems to be the time to be pedantic, there is a new SRD. There is a document, along with the associated books, web pages, Word files, whatever, that specifies what sources are reference material for D&D 5, and which books, web pages, etc., can be contradicted or ignored in new material. WotC hasn't made it public, but I'm sure Green Ronin and other contractors got a copy of it.
Yes... it's called the
Player's Handbook
Okay, Kobold Press was working on their stuff prior. But they likely didn't get some specialized document, they likely just got the rough, unformatted draft of the book. That's not the SRD, it's just the playtest version of the rulebook. They distribute that content all the time, under strict NDA.
An SRD would be a very different document.
What we want is a document given permission for commercial use of D&D 5 in products. It could include a work like the D&D 3 SRD and Pathfinder PRD, that clearly specifies a set of elements that can be used, but not necessarily, as long as the permission grant was relatively clear. 5E OGL doesn't usually refer to the OGL in these discussion; it refers to a vaguely defined set of licenses that would do what we want.
That would be nice. But I'd also love a document that gave permission for non-commercial use. Really, that'd be a lot more desirable for me. Where the line is for posting content on websites or free PDFs.