David Goodman wrote: > My view is that any restriction of distribution that is not absolutely > and unquestionably legally necessary is a violation of the moral > rights of the contributors. We contributed to a free encyclopedia, in > the sense that the material could be used freely--and widely. We all > explicitly agreed there could be commercial use, and most of us did > not particularly concern ourselves with how other commercial or > noncommercial sites would use or license the material, as long as what > we put on Wikipedia could be used by anyone. > > Precisely! To a large extent, we are effectively releasing our work into the public domain, except for the fact that in some countries this is not allowed. Also, putting a work into the public domain means abandoning our rights of action in the event that there is infringement on that public ownership. There is no custodian of the public domain to take action when the copyrights of the general public have been infringed.
I have no complaints about commercial use, but I am concerned when a commercial user massively takes freely licensed or public domain material and parks them under the umbrella of his copyrights so that the users of "his" material unwittingly respect a copyright that has no basis in fact. If the only ones with rights of action against the fraudster are the separate owners of the fragments, we will have loosed the tactic of divide and conquer upon our own selves. I would really like to see a situation where we nominating someone as an non-exclusive agent with the right to prosecute serious copyright violations on a class action basis. I choose to edit with a pseudonym, though my real name is certainly well known to the community. My self-esteem is not so week that I need to be publicly credited for every last edit that I make, the satisfaction of a job well-done is its own reward. We do not own the articles, and we edit each others' work mercilessly. Having a long list of names in 2-point type just so that the individual editor can see his name in print is wasteful and contrary to the spirit of our collective effort. This is not what credit and attribution is about. Expecting anything more from the downstream user than to say that he took things from Wikipedia is unrealistic. Ec _______________________________________________ foundation-l mailing list [email protected] Unsubscribe: https://lists.wikimedia.org/mailman/listinfo/foundation-l
