As for my opinion on your licensing thing, I don't think your
assumptions are accurate. People speak of the Wikipedia as 'an
encyclopaedia', but really it is just a collection of millions of
pieces of text interspersed with Mediawiki markup. The work is not
indivisible, because all the separate contributions can be identified
(that's what the history pages are there for). By using
[[Special:Contributions]] you can identify each of the millions of
edits, which are essentially individual works released under GFDL. The
articles are derivative works, created by the Mediawiki software,
derived from the initial edit. Indeed, the whole website is a
collection of derivative works (which are themselves GFDL licensed).
And whatever your opinion of the GFDL, you really have no option but
to release your contributions under it. Indeed anyone who makes an
edit implicitly accepts the Wikipedia licensing system. One can choose
to multi-license, but any combination of licenses must include the
GFDL (with the exception of public domain).
Putting that aside, you can redistribute any derivative work (or a
verbatim copy) you create from original works under the GFDL, as long
as you distribute it under the GFDL also. That means you can't license
the whole Wikipedia under, for example, a CC license. You can license
your own contributions separately.
Finally IANAL, but IAALS, albeit one in Australia and not familiar
with United States law. --~~~~
On 6/20/05, Alphax <alphasigmax(a)gmail.com> wrote:
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Gregory Maxwell wrote:
en:User:UninvitedCompany has a user page which
contains text with a
form much like a standard copyright grant, which makes the claim that
because wikipedia or it's articles are a collective work by many
authors that any contributor, no matter how minor (as his less than 3k
edits are quite minor compared to the size of wikipedia as a whole
which he lays claim to), is entitled to relicense the work as a whole
under any license they see fit. He then goes on to use this to grant
the entire wikipedia under CC-BY-SA because he has issues with the
GFDL. Although he has been careful to pad his words with the
expected IANALs, it is pretty clear his intention is to circumvent the
licensing of Wikipedia and, failing that, to encourage others to
disregard our licensing.
<snip>
So I'd like to ask the community at large to
please ask uninvited
company to revise his user page. I don't think his claim has any more
merit than pioneer12's disagreement with the form he submitted all his
talk text through, but I think it's all the more negative because it
purports to effect the licensing of work by authors other than him
rather than just his own.
While your insistence on the GFDL is admirable, I (and IANAL) feel
that the user page of UninvitedCompany does not present the same
problems as that of User:Pioneer-12, because UnivitedCompany is *not*
saying that they are refusing to license under the GFDL.
As I see it (and again, IANAL), the statement on
[[User:UninvitedCompany]] (as of 04:25, 20 Jun 2005 (UTC)), says:
1. I have contributed to Wikipedia
2. Wikipedia is NOT a collection, but a single work (which, IMHO, is
contrary to consensus)
3. Wikipedia is a single work with joint authorship (again, contrary to
consensus)
4. Since Wikipedia is a single work, any author can license it however
they want, the rest of Wikipedia be damned (which is against the GFDL)
5. I hereby multi-license my contributions under CC-BY-SA 1.0 and 2.0
6. IANAL so anything in 1-4 must be taken with a very large grain of
salt, and people should check before the distribute material
7. This is a statement of intent, not a contract.
The problems I see are in the status of Wikipedia as being a single work
rather than a collection of works; and the right of a single user
(namely UnivitedCompany) to change the license of the entire Wikipedia
by simply saying that they want their contributions to be under the
Creative Commons licenses.
Now if I've read
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Wikipedia:Multi-licensing
correctly (and again, IANAL), All Wikipedia articles are licensed under
the GFDL, and only the portions written by authors who have
multi-licensed under CC/BSD/whatever are licensed under those
alternative licenses. So (and again, IANAL): your contributions cannot
be licensed under anything except the GFDL unless you choose to do so,
and even then, *they are still under the GFDL*.
- --
Alphax
OpenPGP key: 0xF874C613 -
http://tinyurl.com/cc9up
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/User:Alphax
There are two kinds of people: those who say to God, 'Thy will be done,'
and those to whom God says, 'All right, then, have it your way.' - C. S.
Lewis
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