Someone learned in IP tell me what kind of licensing or copyright applies here. Should people post these with a Creative Commons or a GPL? Obviously we don’t want to start plagiarizing or copyright-violating in the process of making this work. We don’t want to abscond with other people’s decks and start building on them, I think.
IANAL.
It probably makes the most sense to go with a CC-BY-SA license. That gives MIRI/Less Wrong attribution and linkback, and it keeps the decks freely redistributable.
Adding NC will piss off free culture advocates, won’t stop it from being stolen and put on Amazon by chinese bots, and will limit the ability of people to distribute them in weird circumstances. Adding ND prevents them from being improved on.
Though, honestly, what matters more, copyright law or raising the sanity waterline? If you’re associated with MIRI/CFAR/a liable legal fiction you shouldn’t jeopardize that, but if you’re just a person on the Internet making an Anki deck that violates some copyright is pretty safe to do.
So to me the thing that makes the most sense is to use CC-BY-SA if you’re very serious about this, but just steal shamelessly if you just want people to learn.
Though, honestly, what matters more, copyright law or raising the sanity waterline?
The choice you offer is false, in my opinion. If you violate copyright law, you will never gather a community effort, because who wants to work on something that can get DMCA’ed out of existance at any moment?
I think CC-BY-(maybe SA) will work fine, and just use appropriately licensed basic sources like wikipedia.
Plenty of people will work on things that are in legally nebulous territory. That’s the entirety of the WINE project, ReactOS, and a large number of modding communities.
In practice, it’s impossible for any of these projects to die, because the material they hack on is distributed between all their members and there’s no single point of failure.
The more nebulous, the fewer contributors. I certainly would prefer to contribute to properly licensed projects; I’ve had the fun of putting work into a project that for silly license reasons couldn’t get into Debian/GSOC/… I’m willing to forgo it in the future.
I haven’t done any deck making, so give this low weight, but I imagine a truly collaborative and creative joint project where making up, say, fallacious arguments → fallacy name notes that are actually challenging is half the fun, and the benefit of copy-pasta is small anyway.
IANAL.
It probably makes the most sense to go with a CC-BY-SA license. That gives MIRI/Less Wrong attribution and linkback, and it keeps the decks freely redistributable.
Adding NC will piss off free culture advocates, won’t stop it from being stolen and put on Amazon by chinese bots, and will limit the ability of people to distribute them in weird circumstances. Adding ND prevents them from being improved on.
Though, honestly, what matters more, copyright law or raising the sanity waterline? If you’re associated with MIRI/CFAR/a liable legal fiction you shouldn’t jeopardize that, but if you’re just a person on the Internet making an Anki deck that violates some copyright is pretty safe to do.
So to me the thing that makes the most sense is to use CC-BY-SA if you’re very serious about this, but just steal shamelessly if you just want people to learn.
The choice you offer is false, in my opinion. If you violate copyright law, you will never gather a community effort, because who wants to work on something that can get DMCA’ed out of existance at any moment?
I think CC-BY-(maybe SA) will work fine, and just use appropriately licensed basic sources like wikipedia.
Plenty of people will work on things that are in legally nebulous territory. That’s the entirety of the WINE project, ReactOS, and a large number of modding communities.
In practice, it’s impossible for any of these projects to die, because the material they hack on is distributed between all their members and there’s no single point of failure.
The more nebulous, the fewer contributors. I certainly would prefer to contribute to properly licensed projects; I’ve had the fun of putting work into a project that for silly license reasons couldn’t get into Debian/GSOC/… I’m willing to forgo it in the future.
I haven’t done any deck making, so give this low weight, but I imagine a truly collaborative and creative joint project where making up, say, fallacious arguments → fallacy name notes that are actually challenging is half the fun, and the benefit of copy-pasta is small anyway.