2009/2/2 Sam Johnston <s...@samj.net>:
> Exactly. There is nothing 'customary' about massively collaborative
> development of works.

Just about every film of any significance. TV series. Computer games.
Heh just about every bit of major software. Maps of large areas can
rack up very large numbers (depending on a couple of factors).

The other thing to remember is most wikipedia articles don't actually
have that many authors. en has a mean of 17.83 edits per page.
Allowing for bot edits (which mostly don't qualify for copyright),
distortion of that figure due a few very large articles histories and
people editing more than once and you are pretty close to what some
scientific papers rack up in terms of authors.

Most things you could use content for already have customary methods
of giving attribution. That isn't going to change.

-- 
geni

_______________________________________________
foundation-l mailing list
foundation-l@lists.wikimedia.org
Unsubscribe: https://lists.wikimedia.org/mailman/listinfo/foundation-l

Reply via email to