Robert Rohde wrote:
On Wed, Feb 18, 2009 at 7:04 PM, Thomas Dalton thomas.dalton@gmail.com wrote:
2009/2/19 Jussi-Ville Heiskanen cimonavaro@gmail.com:
Without disagreeing on the importance of attribution standards per se, it is clearly inaccurate to say that they signify how we interpret the license. Contributors can be asked to waive rights to content they add to the site (where they are the sole originators of the material, and not merely importing content that has already been published elsewhere) even above and beyond the terms of the specific license, and equally they can be asked to not pursue some rights specified in the license, where such contractual stipulations are legal. Not that it is clear how enforceable such stipulations or waivers would be, if reusers asserted a different understanding of the license and/or the IP laws of their specific jurisdiction.
But sometimes people will be important content that has already been published elsewhere. At best, we're going to have people having to go through the edit history line by line if they want to use content under GFDL, if we add in addition terms of use people will have to go through line by line if they want to do anything using them too. It's really not an option.
On this issue, I largely agree with Thomas, though I would frame the question differently.
In my opinion, it is incumbent upon us to give examples of how we believe third parties can legally and practically reuse WMF content by exercising rights under CC-BY-SA. If we can't, in our collective wisdom, agree on how third parties ought to be able to accomplish that under the new license, then the license is probably inadequate for our needs.
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.
Now we don't have to cover every way that CC-BY-SA might be used. And we don't have to go through every possible complication that might occur with wiki content. But I do think we must be prepared to give concrete examples of how the license may be used in common applications, and that requires being willing to confront the question of "reasonable" attribution.
For the record I do agree with this fully, but I consider it an issue orthogonal to the licensing issue, though clearly related and dependant. That is to say, the issue needs to be addressed despite us moving to the new license, and it is clearly not addressed simply by us moving to the new license.
If someone comes to us and says: "I want to print a copy of [[France]] in my book. What is a reasonable way to comply with the license?", then we really ought to be able to answer that question. If we can't agree on an acceptable answer to that question under CC-BY-SA, then we probably shouldn't be considering adopting it.
Again I have to record dissent. Do keep in mind that under what we are escaping from under, not even the guardians of that license were able to answer that question. So staying under GFDL is not a real way to dodge the issue.
For the record, I am open to the idea that we might well be able to get nearly everyone to agree on a set of "reasonable" usage guidelines consistent with the terms and spirit of CC-BY-SA, but I agree with Thomas that it is important that we address that either before or concurrent with the relicensing effort.
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.
Now on the gripping hand, if the real problem you have here is the fear that some time later, after the migration the foundation were to unilaterally express an interpretation of allowable "reasonable" forms of attribution, I would have to regretfully admit that given past form (and sadly, opinions expressed by some influential people in the foundation staff) that is not unfathomable. The only thing I can offer is that that would of course be a new ball game, and the same people waving whiffle-bats around, would be involved there and then, again. I not only think possible, but am reassured that a bad result could not stand, for long. Please trust the good sense of the community being able to countermand the understandable errors of the foundations operatives.
Yours,
Jussi-Ville Heiskanen