I am guessing what is going on is that the company doesn't want the
writer to turn around and sell his work to another company in an open
submission (like some of the other companies have done) before it is
released as OGL.
An quick work around this is just to have the author give all copyright
to the company. That way he has no rights to his own work until after it is
released as open content. At that point it is fair game under the ogl. He
doesn't suddenly get back the rights to the work.
_______________________________________________
Ogf-l mailing list
[EMAIL PROTECTED]
http://www.opengamingfoundation.org/mailman/listinfo/ogf-l
- [Ogf-l] contracts and the OGL MaggieVining
- RE: [Ogf-l] contracts and the OGL Brad Thompson
- Re: [Ogf-l] contracts and the OGL korath
- Re: [Ogf-l] contracts and the OGL Rogers Cadenhead
- Re: [Ogf-l] contracts and the OGL Chad Thornton
- Re: [Ogf-l] contracts and the OGL Curtis Bennett
- Re: [Ogf-l] contracts and the OGL MaggieVining
- Re: [Ogf-l] contracts and the OGL MaggieVining
- Re: [Ogf-l] contracts and the OGL woodelf (lists)
- Re: [Ogf-l] contracts and the OGL MaggieVining
- Re: [Ogf-l] contracts and the OGL Doug Meerschaert
- Re: [Ogf-l] contracts and the OGL MaggieVining
- Re: [Ogf-l] contracts and the OGL Alec A. Burkhardt
- Re: [Ogf-l] contracts and the OGL Doug Meerschaert
- Re: [Ogf-l] contracts and the OGL Alec A. Burkhardt
