>> >> and any artwork that has the phase 'Released as Open Game Content' >> >> in its Caption or within the "ALT" field of the IMG tag. <<
>> And what happens when someone prints that page? Well, if I decided to mark images based on their HTML/XML tags, then I am not releasing the "rendered" image, be it rendered via browser or your printers print head. I am released the source html code as OGC. I am also indicating in that source html code, which images located in the distribution or on the server are also OGC. Looking at it from a different perspective, lets say I only used Captions (no html source identification, or roll overs, or anything fancy). End users can also right click the image and save it seperately from the rest of the page -- poof, there go the clear indication. Or perhaps they print the whole thing, and the browser (like IE does to *everyone* at my work) decides to clip the about an inch off the right side of the page, which just happened to include the caption. Or perhaps it prints correctly and the image shows up on page X and the caption wraps to the next map, (X+1) which is never printed because the user runs out of paper, or ink, or it is printed and then the user looses that page. IANAL but I belive that as long as the Content is Clearly indicated when the work is viewed via the intended method, for my meduim, then I have satisfied the license. I'm even willing to risk receiving nasty grams about it.. -- Mike _______________________________________________ Ogf-l mailing list [EMAIL PROTECTED] http://mail.opengamingfoundation.org/mailman/listinfo/ogf-l
