I sort of agree with this! I have to confess that
this has been my
attitude from the start. We just say "It is released under the GNU
FDL" and I didn't worry too much about the exact details. The 5
author requirement, etc. are puzzling.
This would be simple to resolve; the semi-official standard at Wikipedia
is no authorship; so we'd just have to state that officially.
We could state that's different for the Wikipedia commentary and
individual pages.
Problem solved. :)
I would actually prefer if we had a way to release
under a
Wikipedia-specific license, but I think we need the instant "free"
credibility of the GNU FDL license. It tells people immediately that
they can count on certain things.
Not only that, the license is pretty tightly put together; it's
marvelously specific about printed publications, which is crucial, and it's
still applicable to electronic publications, an area in which the
law is still vague and changing.
And, so I think that as long as we're using the
GNU FDL, we need to do
what we can to "get it right" for the more pedantic among us. :-)
I'm dead certain that the Free Software Foundation would be more
than willing to get their lawyer to help us get it right. My recommendation
would be for us to draw up a set of questions and proposed answers,
and present them to the FSF for review. They might even be willing to
do a conference call or some sort with Jimbo and Larry.
--
The Cunctator
cunctator(a)kband.com
www.kband.com
www.wikipedia.com/wiki/September_11,_2001_Terrorist_Attack/In_Memoriam