Florian Cramer on Tue, 1 Jul 2003 22:34:29 +0200 (CEST) |
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<nettime> opencontent.org dissolves and stalls its licenses |
As can be read on Slashdot <http://slashdot.org/articles/03/07/01/1247224.shtml?tid=99> and opencontent.org <http://www.opencontent.org> itself, www.opencontent.org, the site which in 1998 coined the concept of "Open Content" is about to dissolve. Its two popular licenses, the Open Content License and, even more importantly, the Open Publication License (used among others by O'Reilly and Prentice Hall publishers) will no longer be maintained and supported. Instead, opencontent.org creator David Wiley <http://wiley.ed.usu.edu/> will join the "Creative Commons" project <http://www.creativecommons.org> as a "Director of Educational Licenses" and therefore advocate to use the Creative Commons license toolkit instead of the original opencontent.org licenses. Below is a copy of my Slashdot posting on the matter. -F As a lecturer in the humanities and net activist who has been evangelizing open content internationally in lectures, papers and as the moderator of congress panels since 1999, I feel like being slapped into my face. It is terrible if you educate people about open content and the necessity of copylefting public information resources, pointing them again and again to opencontent.org and their licenses, and now see that reference dissolve. Especially, it is not funny to see the Open Publication License go away. It had a considerable momentum among book publishers - being used, among others, by O'Reilly and the Bruce Perens book series of Prentice Hall. I put all my own papers under the OPL, encouraged other people to do so as well, and now feel severly f*cked and betrayed by this move. The instability and unreliability now associated with open content copylefts could severely damage the whole movement. As someone who managed to convince a large German public library to release its online content under the Open Publication License, I am pissed and awaiting to take the beating for opencontent.org's irresponsibility. The Creative Commons licenses, in my view, are not an alternative because they are too many and incompatible to each other, thus creating confusion and preventing exchange between work copylefted under their terms. What's still worse is that most Creative Commons licenses are not free in the sense of the Free Software definition of the FSF, the Debian Free Software Guidelines or the Open Source Definition. I urge the initiator of opencontent.org to keep the website alive, if only as a central link repository to other sites, and provide a smooth and sensible upgrade path from the Open Content License and the Open Publication License to particular Creative Common Licenses, for example by crafting a license which would simultaneously be "Open Publication License v2.0" and "Creative Commons License foo". Given the amount of work that already circulates under either the Open Content License or the Open Publication License, anything else would be utterly irresponsible. Imagine the FSF suddenly abandoning/stalling the GPL in favor of some yet-unwritten different license, leaving ten thousands of Free Software developers in the legal lurch and betraying their trust. What is an unlikely horror scenario for free software now has become the reality of open content. Bravo, opencontent.org, Microsoft, the RIAA, the MPA, SCO and all other old copyright regimes now have another reason to cheer and point at copyleft culture as immature, unreliable, not viable for serious publishing, etc.. Please wake up and realize that you have taken up a responsibility which you cannot throw away so easily! -- http://userpage.fu-berlin.de/~cantsin/homepage/ http://www.complit.fu-berlin.de/institut/lehrpersonal/cramer.html GnuPG/PGP public key ID 3200C7BA, finger cantsin@mail.zedat.fu-berlin.de # distributed via <nettime>: no commercial use without permission # <nettime> is a moderated mailing list for net criticism, # collaborative text filtering and cultural politics of the nets # more info: majordomo@bbs.thing.net and "info nettime-l" in the msg body # archive: http://www.nettime.org contact: nettime@bbs.thing.net