Chad Stevens wrote:
Surely even the six-year old with a highlighter is capable of parsing
the sentence "everything which is not X is Y" and using it to identify Y?
The six-year old may be able to do it, but that doesn't change the fact that in using the license, we agree to do what it says. As Mike pointed out, the license requires identifying the material in the positive sense.
And where, exactly, does it do that? It states that "you must clearly indicate which portions of the work [...] are Open Game Content", but at no time does it state that this indication must be done in a "positive sense".

If I say, "I own everything in this room which is not black." I have clearly indicated what belongs me.

Similarly, if I say: "Everything in this book except Chapter 2 is OGC." I have clearly indicated what the OGC in my product is.

Justin Bacon
[EMAIL PROTECTED]

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