I totally agree that we should know in advance on how attribution should take place when people are going to reuse our content. A good example on how to handle this might be how the Blender Foundation did that with its 'Elephant's Dream' and 'Big Buck Bunny' projects (even though the license there is CC-BY):
http://orange.blender.org/blog/creative-commons-license-2/
-- Hay
On Thu, Feb 19, 2009 at 7:27 AM, Robert Rohde rarohde@gmail.com wrote:
On Wed, Feb 18, 2009 at 8:38 PM, Jussi-Ville Heiskanen cimonavaro@gmail.com wrote:
Personally I can't fully agree. Where no new problems are introduced, and old obstacles are removed, the move can be a good thing in itself, irregardless of the ambiguities that were there before, and still remain.
<snip>
I disagree quite clearly that it should be a pre-condition.
I don't think keeping an ongoing discussion of the issue concurrently would necessarily be counterproductive.
But when it comes down to brass tacks, for reasonable people it should be enough that CC-BY-SA is a vastly better license for what we do. Period.
<snip>
Relicensing is not free. It adds a new layer of potential confusion, exposes us to various legal uncertainties, and generates non-trivial hassle (not least of which is the sometimes-but-not-always dual licensing scheme that we would have to keep track of).
I do not consider those issues insurmountable.
However, if we are going to relicense (and ultimately I think we should get away from the GFDL) then it is also important that we get something useful at the end of the day. You say: "CC-BY-SA is a vastly better license for what we do", but that is only true if CC-BY-SA is demonstrably useful. The point I am trying to make is that in order for CC-BY-SA to be useful we should be prepared to concretely show examples of how it can and should be used. If we can't do that, then it largely is not useful.
It is fine to talk abstractly about all the great CC-BY-SA content in the world, and wanting to remove barriers to use, etc. But let's be concrete. How do we use CC-BY-SA to expand our content (for example, when importing content: who gets attributed, where, and how)? How do others use CC-BY-SA when they want to copy from Wikipedia?
I'm hopeful we can answer those questions, but I consider being able to answer them as a clear prerequisite to establishing whether or not CC-BY-SA will actually be useful. Failing that, we would simply be replacing one crummy license that no one knows how to use with another somewhat less crummy license that still no one knows how to use, and that sort of a transaction would be almost entirely a waste of time.
Given the hassle and complexities involved, I'd be very disappointed if at the end of the process we still weren't able to tell people the proper way to use the license.
-Robert Rohde
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