2008/7/28 Anthony <wikimail(a)inbox.org>rg>:
But that's nonsense. You obviously haven't
granted Google such a
license if you don't have a right to do so. If anything you've broken
Google's Terms of Service, not the GFDL.
Greg, pick an article which you feel you've made a significant
contribution to. I'll upload it to Knol, following the terms of the
GFDL, and you can issue a takedown notice. Then I'll issue a putback
notice, you can sue me, and we'll finally have a GFDL test case.
The validity of the GFDL isn't relevant to the case. If the GFDL is
valid you lose for failing to follow it's terms. If the GFDL is not
valid you lose under straightforward copyright. No actual reason for
the court to consider which of these is the case.
--
geni