mkarol said:
o·pen
<Condescention snipped>
---
WOTC made an open license. It is inappropriate for them to come back and make a statement that basically condemns a product that satisfies that license. That is my grounds for saying their statement was overdone.
So you're demanding that they be rhetorically (and not simply in terms of action) consistent with a technical reading of the plain english meaning of OGL? It seems to me that granting a right to produce games under the license doesn't preclude WotC's ability to criticize the use of it. Nor should the fact that the word "open" is in the title mean that they can't legally challenge use of the license if the license grants them legal power to do so in the small print.
In any event, it doesn't seem to me that people have to be or even always ought to be consistent. (Myself, I'm rather glad that most people don't behave or believe entirely in keeping with their principles--if they followed them to the logical conclusions, the world might well be a worse place not a better one). It's been said that a foolish consistency is the hobgoblin of little minds. Now you may not agree with that but if all you have to offer is another point of view, I see no reason to prefer your point of view to the alternative.
If they had added a line that said something like "Although we find this product inappropriate, we respect the right of third party publishers using the OGL to publish the works they create and leave it to the marketplace of consumers to shape the direction of OGL content" then i wouldn’t have a problem.
In other words, if they feel the need to distance themselves from a work, they should ensure that any criticism comes across in the softest possible terms and recognize an absolute "right" of consumers to shape the market in whatever direction they choose. The consequences of such principles are that real criticism is impermissable (try to imagine Michael Moore or any other critic of the war in Iraq criticizing it in those terms--to do so would undermine the criticism they wished to communicate).
The second consequence is that an absolutization of the rights of consumers to buy whatever they want leaves no room for the criticism of even things that are generally (although not universally--searching the internet will reveal that any imaginable example of perversion or evil has groups of ardent supporters and that some are closer to mainstream acceptance than one might think) agreed to be perverse. [According to the moderators, examples of such things are inappropriate for discussion so I won't mention any here].
My basic problem is that when you open the door , you shouldn’t complain about what comes in! Distance yourself, fine. Say that it isn't for you, fine. But don't harshly criticize the people who _do_ want it, _do_ think it is appropriate, or _do_ want to see something new, novel, unique, or different.
Why shouldn't I or anyone else criticize (harshly or otherwise) people who _do_ want to do something perverse or destructive? I know those are loaded terms but so are new, novel, unique and different--the attitude your posts support precludes any discussion of whether something is perverse and destructive or new, novel, unique, etc. I guess I'm just supposed to accept the view that [Example blocked in deference to moderators] is perverse but this book is unique. In the name of allowing novelty and uniqueness, you are actually excluding large groups of people (anyone who disagrees with you on the merits of criticism) from dialogue. That doesn't sound to me like it's creating diversity and novelty.
At no time in this thread have i discussed the merits of the product to which WOTC was responding (I think), only the response itself. That I do find inappropriate. IMO, YMMV, IAAL (but this communication is for information purposes only), etc. etc. etc.
Say what you want, but all the little disclaimers at the end of your post won't change the fact that you're saying that it's inappropriate for anyone to normatively suggest that something is inappropriate. You presume to be able to set the limits of acceptable dialogue. What's ironic is that the view you're trying to place off limits is the view that some things should be off limits.