[OPEN-ILS-DOCUMENTATION] [OPEN-ILS-GENERAL] Evergreen documentation
Mike Rylander
mrylander at gmail.com
Fri Nov 4 12:17:08 EDT 2011
On Fri, Nov 4, 2011 at 7:20 AM, Cynthia Williamson
<crwbookgirl at gmail.com> wrote:
> Hi all - I don't have a new point to add here, just seeking clarification
> and giving my 2 cents....
> .
> I think that Dan is right - other support vendors or anyone doing some
> support for which they are being paid could be said to be making commercial
> use of the documentation.
>
This is the fuzzy part of NC, which I think is the problem most people
have with it.
Interestingly, there's a survey and subsequent study looking at the
difference between, essentially, vendors' and customers' views of what
NC means in terms of a third-party work. There is a statistically
significant difference, as you might assume, but surprisingly (at
least to me) the "vendor-ish" group (that is, folks publishing works
under NC flavored CC licenses, and other revenue generating
institutions looking to use NC works) was much more lenient in what
they view as commercial use than the "customer" group. For instance,
most uses by non-profit entities (the EG foundation compiling a
manual, printing and selling it) are generally seen by "vendors" as
non-commercial use, even if those uses would generate revenue. The
"customer" group, instead, saw that as commercial use.
And, I say all that to say this: ESI doesn't see any use DIG, or the
foundation, or the SFC could make of the works that we would see as
commercial use.
> As Chris has suggested and Mike has acknowledged, NC won't stop those who
> don't respect copyright from committing infringements, no measure of
> copyright protection can do that. If, indeed, ESI will give anyone
> (library, other support vendor, consulting trainer ...) permission as long
> as they ask and will give ESI credit, then I don't know why CC-by-SA won't
> suffice.
>
ESI will absolutely have that conversation with anyone, and I've
specifically called out DIG/EG-foundation/SFC as a group about which
there is basically no question(*). So, I would turn that around to
say that I don't know why the default license being use-restricted --
what, say, your average non-participating community-external vendor
looking to break into the "market" without participating in the
community would be bound by -- is a problem when we're willing -- nay
asking! -- to work through any given situation.
(*IOW, please, DIG, talk to us!)
--
Mike Rylander
| Director of Research and Development
| Equinox Software, Inc. / Your Library's Guide to Open Source
| phone: 1-877-OPEN-ILS (673-6457)
| email: miker at esilibrary.com
| web: http://www.esilibrary.com
> Regards, Cynthia
> Mohawk College Library
> Hamilton, ON
>
>
> On Thu, Nov 3, 2011 at 5:56 PM, Mike Rylander <mrylander at gmail.com> wrote:
>>
>> On Thu, Nov 3, 2011 at 5:25 PM, Chris Cormack <chris at bigballofwax.co.nz>
>> wrote:
>> > On 4 November 2011 10:15, Mike Rylander <mrylander at gmail.com> wrote:
>> >> On Thu, Nov 3, 2011 at 4:30 PM, Mike Rylander <mrylander at gmail.com>
>> >> wrote:
>> >>> On Thu, Nov 3, 2011 at 4:07 PM, Dan Scott <dan at coffeecode.net> wrote:
>> >>>> Hi Sally!
>> >>>>
>> >>>> On Thu, Nov 3, 2011 at 3:54 PM, Sally Fortin <sfortin at esilibrary.com>
>> >>>> wrote:
>> >>>>> Friends and Colleagues,
>> >>>>>
>> >>>>> Many in the Evergreen community have expressed a desire for more
>> >>>>> documentation describing new features in Evergreen. Others have
>> >>>>> requested
>> >>>>> that those who write documentation produce it in more formats,
>> >>>>> including
>> >>>>> asciidoc. ESI trainers and developers have been thinking about how
>> >>>>> to help
>> >>>>> the Evergreen community meet its documentation needs and, to that
>> >>>>> end, are
>> >>>>> making some changes to the way that we produce documentation.
>> >>>>>
>> >>>>> In every new development contract, the cost is inclusive of basic
>> >>>>> end user
>> >>>>> documentation, written by our trainers, that will be released to the
>> >>>>> Evergreen community. If possible, we will release documentation in
>> >>>>> advance
>> >>>>> of the scheduled software release. We will publish the
>> >>>>> documentation on the
>> >>>>> ESI website in both asciidoc and HTML formats to make new
>> >>>>> documentation
>> >>>>> accessible to the community. Community members or DIG members can
>> >>>>> adapt the
>> >>>>> documentation to community or local needs in accordance with the
>> >>>>> CC-BY-NC-SA
>> >>>>> license that is listed on each document. Finally, we'll make an
>> >>>>> announcement to the community every time new documentation is
>> >>>>> available for
>> >>>>> download. You can also check our blog or website for updates on
>> >>>>> documentation.
>> >>>>
>> >>>> This sounds really great, but I have to note that the NC
>> >>>> ("Non-commercial") clause is problematic. It is in some measure
>> >>>> incompatible with CC-BY-SA; it restricts the use of the documentation
>> >>>> significantly such that the DIG would probably not be able to
>> >>>> integrate the Equinox contributions as no commercial use of the
>> >>>> Evergreen documentation would be allowed - and the definition of what
>> >>>> commericial use is is very fuzzy.
>> >>>>
>> >>>> For example, if a different company that offers Evergreen support
>> >>>> distributes a copy of the Evergreen docs as part of their Evergreen
>> >>>> support package, that could easily be defined as "commercial use"; or
>> >>>> training documentation derived from the Evergreen docs could be
>> >>>> defined as "commercial use".
>> >>>>
>> >>>> Hopefully this is just an oversight and the real intention is to
>> >>>> release the Equinox-derived documentation under the CC-BY-SA license.
>> >>>
>> >>> It's not an oversight.
>> >>>
>> >>> We can, certainly, grant a differently flavored license to the DIG
>> >>> (well, the foundation, I guess) specifically, or provide explicit
>> >>> clarification on points of concern regarding commercial use, if that's
>> >>> the only way DIG will be able to make use of the documentation we
>> >>> produce. But unless a licensing exception is requested (and, really,
>> >>> all it takes is an email explaining why) we'll be defaulting to the
>> >>> less BSD-like -NC license.
>> >>>
>> >>
>> >> I feel I should clarify the reasons for this decision.
>> >>
>> >> We have, in recent memory, had documentation that we produced and own
>> >> the copyright on taken directly, rebranded to strip all mention of ESI
>> >> -- in the content, copyright notices, everything -- and reused without
>> >> any attribution. This has happened more than once, and was not
>> >> addressed even after we specifically requested that the we simply be
>> >> credited. Because our request for simple attribution has not been
>> >> respected, we felt it important to make a clear and strong statement
>> >> that, while everything we produce will be made available to the Open
>> >> Source community for use and reuse, we (all, not just ESI) have to put
>> >> thought explicitly into protecting our rights and being explicit about
>> >> what we will allow by default.
>> >>
>> >> Again, because we own these works, we can license them to whomever we
>> >> wish under whatever license works for any given situation -- just ask,
>> >> and work with us, if there's no way for any particular group (DIG,
>> >> other vendors, etc) to use NC content based on the advice of council,
>> >> or without clarification of what constitutes commercial use based on
>> >> our understanding and intent.
>> >>
>> >> Unfortunately, history has forced us to default to a stronger initial
>> >> license than we might otherwise have chosen.
>> >>
>> > Hmm playing devils advocate, do you think they will respect the NC
>> > clause any more than they respected by BY-SA ?
>> >
>>
>> That's a point that was raised, and I think that the point has merit
>> -- some that would avoid attributing a BY-SA work won't respect NC --
>> but that doesn't mean that we shouldn't state our intentions and
>> desires explicitly. The analogy that comes to mind is leaving your
>> front door unlocked and open when you go on vacation. The door being
>> open doesn't excuse burglars from coming in and taking your TV, but
>> you bear some responsibility for not taking common-sense steps to
>> avoid the theft.
>>
>> --
>> Mike Rylander
>> | Director of Research and Development
>> | Equinox Software, Inc. / Your Library's Guide to Open Source
>> | phone: 1-877-OPEN-ILS (673-6457)
>> | email: miker at esilibrary.com
>> | web: http://www.esilibrary.com
>
>
>
> --
> "Age is something that does not matter
> unless you are a cheese." Billie Burke
>
>
>
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