Yeah, I agree that is the danger of any license. But discounting the sort of out-of-the-blue legal upset that could derail us all (and is unlikely in the extreme), I guess all I'm trying to say is that Prometheus is not particularly at risk above other d20srd-based works, which was the original implication I was addressing.
Tom Caudron Administrator of the Prometheus Project http://www.PrometheusGaming.com On Thu, 2006-08-17 at 08:10 -0700, Steven Trustrum wrote: > > > > I tend to believe that amongst all the various lawyers all of us have > > spoken with, at least one of them would have raised the red flag if the > > terms of the OGL were somehow dangerously mercurial or if there were > > enforcement leeway on those terms that made them so. > > No matter how many lawyers one personally consults on the OGL (I've > contacted two myself for different reasons), or how many speak up on lists > such as this, I've learned there's still always a lawyer out there who > brings up an entirely new way of looking at the license. Some are pretty > outlandish and still, at this late date, continue to hold to the sort of > paranoia not seen since the OGL's first days. > > Steven Trustrum > President > > Misfit Studios > http://www.misfit-studios.com > [EMAIL PROTECTED] > > > _______________________________________________ > Ogf-l mailing list > Ogf-l@mail.opengamingfoundation.org > http://mail.opengamingfoundation.org/mailman/listinfo/ogf-l _______________________________________________ Ogf-l mailing list Ogf-l@mail.opengamingfoundation.org http://mail.opengamingfoundation.org/mailman/listinfo/ogf-l