Yes indeed you touch on a couple of the essential issues! I won't even try to 
present the alternative and opposing views apart from observing that they exist.

You only have to look at the blogs to come up with a huge volume of discussion, 
debate and name calling on this subject.

At present my thought is to emulate the Linux software repositories, Ubuntu 
being the one that I am most familiar with.

Ubuntu has several levels of repository:

"Canonical suported (main)"
"Community maintained" (universe)
"Proprietary drivers" (restricted)
"Software restricted by copyright or legal issues" (multiverse)
"Software that is restricted by geography, free speech restrictions, crypto 
restrictions etc." (Medibuntu)

Finally for those who want totally unrestricted content there is always 
PirateBay.com.

In this way the end user may determine what level of restriction or licensing 
is appropriate for their individual requirements and/or conscience.

It is far from a perfect solution, but it seems about as good as any that I 
have seen.

Getting back to my original point (rant) though, while the repositories are 
completely independent, the Ubuntu documentation includes directions for 
finding and evaluating all of them - except for PirateBay :-)!

My model for the OpenSim content "library" is something similar. Several 
"levels" of repository with a central index of repositories and descriptions of 
their content in the OpenSim Wiki.

Only one of the repositories need be actually supported or endorsed by 
opensimulator.org, but I fell strongly that all legal content should be 
findable through the wiki. 

If that is not done then eventually other distribution channels will certainly 
spring up with things that none of us want to see distributed. For example the 
latest copybot - apparently V5.00 10.2.2009 which can be found with little 
effort on the P2P networks.

Karen

--- On Thu, 12/10/09, Mic Bowman <[email protected]> wrote:

> From: Mic Bowman <[email protected]>
> Subject: Re: [Opensim-users] Free objects (dmu1 and dmu2 .IAR files)
> To: [email protected]
> Date: Thursday, December 10, 2009, 12:13 PM
> Just a couple observations on this
> discussion... 
> 
> If you want professional content creators to be willing to
> license high quality content for use in opensim grids, you
> need to gain their trust that content will be used
> appropriately. That can be through well documented (and
> demonstrated) take down procedures. Or through some common
> set of agreements among grid owners about how content will
> be handled. Or...
> 
> 
> And... many companies won't touch "free"
> content unless its provenance can be established. I know we
> require some form of "certificate of origin" or a
> clear license that grants rights to use the content. And for
> content we use internally, we keep those licenses archived.
> Providing a means for a content owner to describe the
> license for use seems like a good thing no matter what.
> Given that oar and iar files are just tar files... could we
> add an optional "license" file in a well known
> location without messing up the load/save?
> 
> 
> --mic



      
_______________________________________________
Opensim-users mailing list
[email protected]
https://lists.berlios.de/mailman/listinfo/opensim-users

Reply via email to