Jimmy Wales wrote:
Toby Bartels wrote:
The Creative Commons SA licence, in contrast, has no such problems. It is by any objective measure the superior licence; however, we really should license Wikibooks disjunctively with the GNU FDL, so that books can borrow the substantial material from Wikipedia if useful.
I don't think disjunctive licensing solves the license incompatibility issues. We'll be taking content from Wikipedia (GNU FDL) and then offering it under *either* GNU FDL or CC-SA. Suppose someone tries to re-use the content under CC-SA rather than GNU FDL, how does that not violate the provisions of use for the solely-FDL content?
No, this is not what we will be doing (under my suggestion).
If a textbook (like a cookbook would) takes content from Wikipedia, then it must license those contents under the GNU FDL alone. It obviously can't license them under a disjunctive licence; that would be a blatant violation of the GNU FDL, which says that only the GNU FDL can be used.
OTOH, if a textbok (like any math book would) doesn't take content from WP, then it can use CC SA, or a disjunctive licence, or whatever it likes. My argument that you quoted above is about this situation.
Maybe this will work, though, but we need to think hard about the details.
To be sure.
One thing to consider is when material is different enough that it can belong to different licences (potentially), in case one wants to borrow from Wikipedia and one doesn't. This would be less a matter of distinction between material covered than the appropriate style of explanation for the relevant audience.
For example, both a physics text and a math text might discuss vectors. But the physics explanation wouldn't be rigorous enough for the math text, and the math explanation wouldn't have the right sort of applications for the physics text. Anything borrowed would need to be rewritten -- in which case, copyright and licence issues don't apply. Similarly, a chemistry text and a cookbook might both discuss caramelisation, but in very different ways for different purposes, with no sharing of text. OTOH, the physics and chemistry texts might well want to borrow, not just information, but entire chunks of text with only minor changes -- especially given the modular nature of textbooks that's been proposed here, where different textbooks might share the exact same module.
IMO, only the cookbook (of these examples) is likely to want WP text, so only it would need to change its licence from a disjunction to GNU FDL. Still, I may be wrong about the science books, since I'm not very familiar with either Wikipedia's material or the real needs of such textbooks. OTOH, a math textbook would need to rewrite every WP article it uses, and would probably just consider WP one more source of information.
We'd also have to write code to handle all of this, but we need to redo all of the code anyway for the modules.
If we were starting wikipedia from scratch today, I would prefer to create a wikipedia license that says "You can redistribute this content under GNU FDL, CC-SA, or additional free licenses that may be specified from time to time on this page."
This is exactly what I propose. This is a disjunctive licence.
But isn't it too late for that?
It is indeed too late for Wikipedia, AFAICT, but not for Wikibooks -- unless a Wikibook borrows from WP, in which case the disjunctive licence allows the project to switch over. If mav ends up being entirely right, then every project will borrow from WP but never from anything non-GNU, in which case everything will eventually be under the GNU FDL anyway. But I don't think that mav is right, certainly not for math books.
-- Toby