David, While there is nothing from preventing you from doing this under the terms of the GPL. I personally have goals for the project that would lean against it.
I would like CrossWire to form partnerships with copyright holders and Bible Societies that allow them to use our software in their ministry. With the recent release of the OSIS specification, my hope is for SWORD to become the premier OSIS Bible reader, freely available for these organizations to recommend or distribute themselves. With the sponsorship of the Amercan Bible Society, and Society for Biblical Literature, I'm sure there will be a huge library of OSIS encoded texts soon available, sold either by these organizations, themselves, or in bundle packs from other software distributors. We currently have export tools that allow most of our library to be exported as an OSIS text. ABS has already asked us if we would be willing to encode their CEV text in OSIS for them. I hope this gives a little more insight into my hopes regarding this issue. Thank you for your willingness to help. -Troy. PS. An update with regard to the Afrikaans Bible Society: They already have the facilities to accept orders online, themselves, and have no problems working within our current policy. In fact, I just received an Afrikaans locale file today! David's Mailing List and Spam Reciever wrote: > On Tuesday 24 September 2002 06:23 pm, Troy A. Griffitts wrote: > >>Our position with copyrighted texts: >> >>We will help publishers and copyright holders with their text for sword. >> We will even distribute their text for them for free, or as locked >>modules. We will not handle their money for them. If they will not >>allow us to distributed freely under any terms, then we will encipher >>and provide them with the module and key, and even publish the >>enciphered module for download from our site, but this is as far as >>CrossWire will go, in regard to selling modules. > > > What if there was an independant ministry that handled the money if the > publisher/copyright holder can't/won't? I have an internet ministry currently > in limbo that I could use for such a purpose I guess. >