Peter Kupfer wrote:

> Hmmm... Can't we just say we are using the part of the dual license we like?

No, we can't. We can only use a dual license while we meet the requisites 
of both licenses.

> 1) I think it diminishes the work of the "Head" author

Yes. And that's just something we have to accept. At *most*, we can put 
"(maintainer)" next to the current maintainer, or something like that.

No license is perfect. Every license has drawbacks. Having to give people 
equal prominence is a very very minor thingie compared all the things we 
are gaining.

> 2) Someone might e-mail me with questions when they should be directed 
> at you.

They shouldn't be writing to either of us. The Feedback section says that 
feedback should go to this list.

> I guess if we have to do it a certain way to get into the CC-BY, then we 
> have to do it. I guess this would be my biggest reservation at this point.

Peter, it's worth it. The PDL license we have right now is very 
restrictive. It is a significant burden for the editors, and we are on 
shaky legal ground because of the practical infeasibility of meeting all 
of its requirements (ie. keeping track of who changed what). Also, the PDL 
is a walled garden. Our work is isolated. Doesn't that miss the whole 
point of FOSS? What makes FOSS different from freeware is that you can 
modify the content.

On the other hand, the new license (GPL / CC-BY) is *easy* for us to meet, 
so we gain simplicity and legal certainty. In addition to that, it gives 
us enormous space for modification. It can be used with any GPL program, 
and also with any CC license.

I think this is a pretty good trade.


> A philosophical question: What is a license. Can't we just make up our 
> own license. Are we required to follow one of these other licenses, or 
> is it just easier?

1) If we want our work to go on the OOo website, we must provide it on an 
approved license. That means PDL or CC-BY.

2) We are not lawyers. We can't just throw together a license.

3) If we could, we still shouldn't. License proliferation is one of the 
gravest problems hurting FOSS right now. This creates more than just 
confusion. It creates isolation, it causes incompatibility which prevents 
mixability. And the ability to modify and mix is the life and blood of 
FOSS. If we lose that, we're no better than freeware. Worse yet, the 
ability to mix is precisely what has made FOSS successful.

Cheers,
-- 
Daniel Carrera          | I don't want it perfect,
Join OOoAuthors today!  | I want it Tuesday.
http://oooauthors.org   | 

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