Dear James,
If that was what Michael was saying, then I apologize for what I said to
him. However, I think the problem could be is that some people see only what
wired.com says (i.e. targetting Creative Commons, etc) and not the law that
was being passed that the backers of those were in opposition to (i.e. the
anti-piracy law. As I pointed out in the WSJ article, was something Lawrence
Lessig would be against as he wanted, if you read the very end, to end any
enforcement of copyright laws against P2P people, which happens to be
blatant piracy).
I am all for my chosing to release my content without any copyright
restrictions. I am against forcing everyone to do the same, as there is a
lot of content of my own that I do not release freely and I would not want
to be released freely.
Sincerely,
Jeffrey Peters
aka Ottava Rima
On Fri, Jun 25, 2010 at 7:34 PM, James Alexander <jamesofur(a)gmail.com>wrote;wrote:
On Fri, Jun 25, 2010 at 7:15 PM, Jeffrey Peters <
17peters(a)cardinalmail.cua.edu> wrote:
Dear Michael,
I find it problematic that you suggest that yourself or the Foundation
would
speak out against this, when the law in question is about terminating the
access to those who have been caught pirating material in violation of
set
copyright multiple times.
This is problematic because Wikipedia has a huge plagiarism and copyvio
problem that is caused by the same people that would come under conflict
above.
This clearly would not affect those who freely license their own
material,
which is what Wikipedia and the WMF is about.
I've donated thousands of
hours and hundreds of megs of my own material and my own effort. I find
it
a
slap in the face that you would then make such statements.
Sincerely,
Jeffrey Peters
aka Ottava Rima
I think that Michael was talking about speaking against them if they were
targeting the CC license itself (he was responding to my comment about the
CC licenses). Given that those are the licenses we use (and that a large
pillar of our projects is having as much of our information available under
licenses like it) it would make sense that we want to be aware of what was
happening and make sure our reasoning was out there.
I, like you, think the issue of the ISP rule is different. In many ways I
actually support the 3 strikes rule .It isn't perfect in my mind but much
better then the lawsuits which I think harmed the industry far more then it
helped. I went to many court cases out of interest and while some were very
interesting (there were a couple people that to be honest probably deserved
to be sued) most were a mass of depression.
James Alexander
james.alexander(a)rochester.edu
jamesofur(a)gmail.com
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