Sam Liddicott | 3 Nov 20:29

RE: GFDL 1.3

I find it slightly funny that the invariant sections seemed to be a blocker to the relicensing.

I think the GPL3 dated exception relates to the Novel deal but I find it strange because although it is
topical I'm not aware of an actual neccessity for that exception. I don't find it offensive but it makes me
wary and I hope it doesn't bite later on.

I don't know what the GFDL exception is about, could you enlighten? Did the authors of the work in question
want their work to be relicensable?

Perhaps there should be an explanatory note in each case - at least to presenting the reason in favourable
light would make political sense.

I don't like GFDL arbitrary restrictions like "five words" and so forth, but that's off topic...

 Sam

-----Original Message-----
From: Alex Hudson <home@...>
Sent: 03 November 2008 16:55
To: discussion@...
Subject: GFDL 1.3

I made a comment on IRC about this, so I may as well vent here as well:

    <http://www.gnu.org/licenses/fdl-1.3.html>

I'm not a big fan of these new extra permissions clauses, but limiting 
them by date so that only our special friends can make use of them seems 
peverse. Both GPLv3 and now GFDLv1.3 have them now, with dates that are 
back-dated before the publication of the licenses.

Presumably they're back-dated because we don't want other GFDL material 
to suddenly become CC-BY-SA just by posting it on a wiki, but that - to 
me - kind of points out the antithetical nature of this modification to 
the spirit of the original license.

Thoughts?

Cheers,

Alex.
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