This may be of interest to some.
http://www.creativecommons.org/ was announced today; it is "a non-profit
organization founded on the notion that some people would prefer to share
their creative works (and the power to copy, modify, and distribute their
works) instead of exercising all of the restrictions of copyright law."
This appears to mean that they're working on a set of tools to make it
very easy for people to release their creative output as public domain,
or under a custom license while retaining copyright.
They mention that they intend to make it possible to select open licenses
offered by other organizations. As a minor stakeholder in the OGF (in
that I would like to release some of my creative gaming output under
an open license), I'd encourage the OGF to contact Creative Commons
regarding that possibility.
--
Bryant Durrell [] http://www.innocence.com/~durrell [] 9/11/2001
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I'm not doing this *just* to be weird.
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