Martin Continuing to repeat a twisted version of what actually happened does not make it truer.
Apple: the Foundation has engaged (documented) multiple times with the company on this matter, even though, as you VERY well know, the data they use is pre-licence change and the OSMF has no IP rights in the data. While not ideal, the current attribution is a lot better than what they originally had. Given the legal situation with CC by-SA and DB protection in the US that is about the limit of what we can reasonably do (and wasting time flogging dead horses is something that most people don't enjoy as much as you do). MS*: we immediately took the matter up with MS, and were promised that they would rectify the issue when they rolled out new imagery.They where a bit late with that, but otherwise they did exactly what they promised us. Again it is not quite sure what you expect, should we have closed bing down (which in some countries would have been possible)? Aka "take a big gun and shoot ourselves in the foot". And BTW we didn't write letters in either case. Simon * background: MS had used polygons from OSM to blur some supposedly military relevant areas in Germany in their aerial imagery, the whole thing was very badly advised on behalf of MS and simply a screw up. Am 15.03.2014 11:22, schrieb Martin Koppenhoefer: > > >> Am 14/mar/2014 um 09:48 schrieb Norbert Wenzel >> <norbert.wenzel.li...@gmail.com>: >> >> And to the topic. It might not always be easy to enforce the >> share-alike clause, but I really like the fact that we have it and may >> enforce it if necessary. > > > actually it seems we won't enforce it upon people who don't follow the share > alike provisions, probably not even the attribution obligations will be > "enforced". > > Do you know of any case where OSMF did more than write a letter? Uses of osm > without attribution are revealed every now and then but never has happened > something (read: attempt to enforce the license) substantial whether they > added attribution and declared share alike or not. e.g. MS could continue to > distribute tainted aerials for months if not years, apple does so for at > least 2 years, the wiki has a long but quite incomplete list of others: > http://wiki.openstreetmap.org/wiki/License_violation > > cheers, > Martin > _______________________________________________ > talk mailing list > talk@openstreetmap.org > https://lists.openstreetmap.org/listinfo/talk > _______________________________________________ talk mailing list talk@openstreetmap.org https://lists.openstreetmap.org/listinfo/talk