Clark writes:
> Based on your comments in your prior email, do you
> mean what I should do is change section 15 to now
> read:
>
> "15 COPYRIGHT NOTICE
> Open Game License v 1.0 Copyright 2000, Wizards of the
> Coast, Inc. The Crucible of Freya is � 2000, Clark
> Peterson and Bill Webb, Necromancer Games, Inc."
>
> Does that fix the problem you have with that portion
> of the legal text?
I'll leave Ryan to answer for himself, but that does indeed seem to follow
what the license requires.
If you look at Three Days to Kill, our "Copyright Notice" on the end of the
license reads:
"COPYRIGHT NOTICE
Open Game License v.03 (Simplified), Copyright 2000, Wizards of the Coast,
Inc.
Three Days to Kill open game content, Copyright 2000, John Tynes."
(Normally it would be Copr. Trident, Inc. d/b/a Atlas Games, but Tynes has a
special deal with us. And, normally, we'd have a later license version
number!)
I should note, however, that we all should, I believe, have a line in there
at some point with "D20 System Reference Document, Copyright 2000, Wizards
of the Coast, Inc." Since, after all, the OGL'd portions of the D20 System
are the first document from which we're at this point working.
Am I right, Ryan? And if so, what precise language would be appropriate?
(E.g., we might say PH instead of D20SRD, but I'm assuming the latter should
be the final form, keeping a clean split from the D&D trademarks.)
-John Nephew
President, Atlas Games
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