Giuseppe, You have made a *major* error in your thinking. You are asserting that 100% of the value of a political writing is held in the value of identifying the message with an author. Your logic is saying that the *entire* value of RMS' writings is in identifying RMS' views so that people know specifically what RMS thinks.
In fact, almost the entire value actually comes from the underlying value of the ideas. The value is in the message itself. Thus, a translation of my political writings into Italian offers value proportional to how valuable my message and perspective is. If my writing was pretty much worthless, the translation will be worthless. If my writings were inspiring, meaningful, insightful, then a translation that manages to uphold the important elements and be inspiring, meaningful, and insightful is itself just as valuable as the original. Yes, it holds just a bit less value in *one* regard: information about what I believe. For that one *minor* value, the translation is not worthless, but isn't perfect. But that value is rarely the important one. You could translate my work *without* crediting me (say if I used CC0 waiver of my copyright), and the mere spreading of valuable ideas would be valuable — and that value would be hampered if I used terms that made it harder for you to spread these ideas. On 05/17/2015 03:53 AM, Giuseppe Molica wrote: >> As already stated, the other (non-ND) CC licenses already *include* >> clauses already that state that modified version must be marked as >> modified and that authors can demand that their name be *removed* from >> derivatives they wish to not be associated with. > > Let's make a theoretical example: if you write a political article, and I > decide to translate it in > italian, making some changes, and marking it as "modified", what your > "gain" is? > > It becomes MY representation of YOUR view, so it doesn't help your > cause; who is interested in your opinion must read your version: this > means that my translation is useless and "dangerous", because who doesn't > check will never know how my modified version is different from the > original article, and could think (despite the mark) that our visions > are "similar". > -- Aaron Wolf co-founder, Snowdrift.coop music teacher, wolftune.com
