Hoi, When you insist on the enforcement of "share alike" in the strongest possible way, you prevent mashing and collaboration. You prevent the use of material in academic papers. In this way the medicine that are free and open licenses is as bad as what it is to cure; restrictive licenses and restrictive practices.
Obviously it is a choice, it may even be your choice but you *are *replacing restrictive practices with restrictive practices.. Thanks, GerardM
On Sun, Apr 6, 2008 at 11:43 AM, geni geniice@gmail.com wrote:
On 06/04/2008, Pharos pharosofalexandria@gmail.com wrote:
On Fri, Apr 4, 2008 at 10:34 PM, Erik Moeller erik@wikimedia.org
wrote:
We are continuing our conversations about that particular aspect, and my personal hope is that we will figure out a way to clearly state through the license that adaptations such as a picture embedded into
a
newspaper article trigger the share-alike clause, i.e. the newspaper article would be CC-BY-SA licensed. (Or, as I would argue, in those particular cases, any other DFCW compliant license.)
Have you at all considered the practical effect of such a redefinition?
The day such a redefinition is passed will not be the day that the world media suddenly shifts over to free content all-of-a-sudden in glorious revolution.
No, that will be the day when they stop using free-licensed photos at
all.
Thanks,
Pharos
In the short term yes. But then Microsoft don't use gnu based stuff and Linux still ticks over. The argument is that incidental use of free images in non free text doesn't gain us anything anyway. However by using strong copyleft we can perhaps get free text releases from the likes of university and school newspapers. Perhaps society magazines rather than trying to target the top end and not getting much to show for it.
Of course there is a new scientist article under a free license somewhere. It is under a free license so they could include a copy of a recipe for free cola.
-- geni
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