2009/3/20 geni <geniice(a)gmail.com>om>:
Now that argument is flawed on a number of grounds but
I think I'll
take the easy option. Where is the link of the following pages:
Try the edit pages.
1) Authors
contributed acknowledging that they are licensing their
edits under the GFDL;
2) The GFDL has an "at least five principal authors" requirement to
give credit on the page title;
3) Wikipedia does not give credit on the page title;
Strangely there is no requirement that the history and the title page
not be the same thing.
There's no reason to assume that they are. The GFDL defines Title Page
as the text "near the most prominent appearance of the work's title,
preceding the beginning of the body of the text". The interpretation
that an arbitrarily titled link somewhere on the document (it used to
be called "Older versions") to a difficult to navigate changelog
exists to satisfy the author credit provisions of the GFDL (section
4.B, since you asked) is hardly more defensible than the
interpretation that credit is given to the Wikipedia community ("From
Wikipedia"), or that no credit is given. You're in woolly territory to
begin with, which again re-affirms what I've been saying: we can
identify, through past practices, community-created terms of re-use,
the way that Wikipedia itself implements the GFDL, etc., a reasonable
baseline. Providing credit by linking to the page is a reasonable
baseline. And again, nowhere does a significantly greater expectation
for credit reasonably arise.
It's also
evident because a GFDL document can be
created without a page history while still giving author credit.
However it cannot be modified without creating a history and that
history is required to include "new authors" among other things.
Irrelevant.
I am saying
that we have established,
through historical practice, policy and debate, that crediting
re-users via link or URL is a minimally acceptable baseline.
False. Look up history merging sometime.
Re-parse "minimally acceptable baseline".
--
Erik Möller
Deputy Director, Wikimedia Foundation
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