Will, Obviously, I agree with Richard Stallman's views in almost every respect. He is on the right side of all of this for the most part, and obviously there are bad actors on the opposite side.
I'm not blaming RMS for the situation with the music industry. But this is all tangential. You and others have failed to provide any reasonable justification for RMS' use of ND other than an ill-founded claim that it actually helps avoid misrepresentation. I've pointed out that misrepresentation is possible regardless and that CC has a clause that requires modified versions to be marked as modified. Furthermore, plagiarism and misrepresentation are fraudulent regardless of copyright law. You haven't provided any clear point about what distinction you are drawing where freedom 3 should not apply. Nor have you addressed any of the other points. The most simple example of value from derivative works is the violation of ND that someone did when they posted an RMS video edited *only* to remove pauses while leaving the entire content intact. The result was a better viewing experience that more people will watch as it is shorter. There's tons of other ways people might use material productively. I might very well choose to make useful grammatical edits that make an essay just a bit easier to read. I could ask RMS for permission, but he would want to see the work first, so I'd have to do the work and then find out whether I can publish. If he says yes, I would surely have to keep the ND terms. Thus, someone else would have to ask him again if they wanted to make further improvements. Freedom is an important principle, and modeling it matters. Regardless of the utility of these exact writings, the message sent by promoting ND undermines values that are important and aligned with the mission for software freedom. Absolutely none of this is anywhere near as bad as the truly bad actors out there. RMS is still a great person and a hero doing wonderful things. But he should stop using ND. It isn't justified and you haven't provided even a reasonable argument for it that could be discussed. When/if RMS dropped ND, it *would* result in positive prospects for the messages of software freedom that we care about, and it would not have the feared results that he is currently so worried about. I still respect his emotional concern. He's not crazy to have these worries. But they aren't founded enough to justify the ND license. This is both practical and symbolic issue. Respectfully, Aaron On 05/15/2015 10:30 PM, Will Hill wrote: > Your problem seems to be copyright wielded by a rapacious publishing > industry. > What does that have to do with Richard Stallman saying ND is appropriate for > works of opinion, or translation? GNU is not keeping you from writing great > music texts. If Richard Stallman was magically in charge of laws tomorrow, I > think you would get your chance to write textbooks. > > On Saturday 16 May 2015, Aaron Wolf wrote: >> So, what's the line you are drawing? When are political statements not >> educational? Which songs have no opinions in them? >> >> On 05/15/2015 09:57 PM, Will Hill wrote: >>> Who says we should apply ND to instructions, text books, or songs? >>> >>> On Friday 15 May 2015, Aaron Wolf wrote: >>>> I am a guitar teacher. I would like to create a major improvement to >>>> educational materials using the best resources and reference to hundreds >>>> of culturally-relevant songs that would inspire students. > > > -- Aaron Wolf co-founder, Snowdrift.coop music teacher, wolftune.com
