2009/1/8 Brian <Brian.Mingus(a)colorado.edu>du>:
Another question: Given the WMF admission in the FAQ
that the GFDL has *
never* been followed in re-use of Wikipedia content due to the insane
difficulty of doing so, and given its rampant "illegal" re-use on the web,
and the WMF's ignoring this illegal re-use for years on end, what chance is
there that a court of law would find that the GFDL actually applies to this
content were someone to sue a re-user?
Isn't it true that the efforts to force re-users to appropriately atrribute
the content have not actually asked them to follow the letter of the GFDL?
Is a license that is never enforced truly a license, in the legal sense?
The license is between the author and the re-user, the fact that the
WMF has tolerated it being violated is irrelevant. You can lose a
trademark by not defending it, but I don't think the same applies to
copyrights, so unless the individual owner can be shown to have said
it was all right not to follow the license to the letter, I don't see
why they can't sue. (IANAL, YMMV, BBQ)