Anthony wrote:
On Thu, Apr 16, 2009 at 3:22 PM, Jussi-Ville Heiskanen <cimonavaro@gmail.com
wrote:
Jussi-Ville Heiskanen wrote:
Anthony wrote:
Are you strongly opposed to all types of "intellectual property"? Vote
for
the change.
I don't see how this is warranted. As it stands the TOS proposed is certainly semantically confusing, but hardly in stark opposition to intellectual property. In fact Lawrence Lessig is on record as stating taht CC licenses *depend* on intellectual property rights, even if their purport is to maximally facilitate unlimited re-use, and keeping the content in play for re-use.
How would you suggest someone strongly opposed to all types of "intellectual property" should vote, then? Considering that the main proponent of the proposal, Erik Moeller, is strongly opposed to all types of "intellectual property", it seems like a given that someone else who feels similarly should vote in favor of the move.
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Hobson%27s_choice
I don't consider Moeller the main proponent of the current proposal in any meaningful way; except in the very narrow sense that Moeller is admirably acting to employ "the art of the possible", and therefore is doing the work of moving the compromise, that happens to be most viable, forward.
I think it isn't public knowledge what Erik's full personal feelings on the current proposal are, as it is under vote.
Do you believe that the right to attribution is a fundamental natural
right
which is held by individuals and cannot be alienated by majority vote?
Vote
against the change, or refuse to vote at all.
Now this is just simply beyond the pale. You know full well that the license as such is implicitly BY.
The proposal contains much more than just a switch to CC-BY-SA, it also includes language interpreting CC-BY-SA in a way which indisputably changes the form of attribution required.
I don't think the word "indisputably" means what you think it does.
Even if I agree on a very broad level that the phrasing is mildly confusing to our re-users, and certainly not ideal, I think there have been arguments defending the view that there isn't a change of form for attribution which goes beyond what the license allows. I am not convinced that those defensive arguments are wholly safe in the absolute, but this does not mean I don't accept that others may think differently.
I will just agree to disagree with them on that point, and keep stipulating publicly that it is a remote possibility that where the failure point of those arguments would be, if any, would ever in practice come into play.
Yours,
Jussi-Ville Heiskanen