[open-government] Share-alike
stef
stefan.marsiske at gmail.com
Sat Sep 17 08:20:52 UTC 2011
the SA clause is good.
On Sat, Sep 17, 2011 at 09:44:37AM +1000, Brendan Morley wrote:
> It seems like your city wants to discriminate against the innovator
> / entrepreneurial class.
i beg to disagree you can in fact be an innovator and honor the SA.
> Share-Alike has the effect of the author still trying to reserve its
> rights against commercialisation of its data.
nope, it only keeps the data free and prohibits the privatization of the
commons. which i'd say that's not innovation but robbery.
> (After all, the
> author itself doesn't *have* to SA, only the downstream users!)
so the one creating value should not have privileges?
> Whereas non Share-Alike puts everyone on the same playing field for
> downstream value adding.
being on the same playing field is good, no?
> I'd be interested to know why SA was considered by the city in the
> first place. It seems like cargo cult thinking.
pls refrain from insulting people creating values for the commons.
> depends on liberally licensed works as contributions (i.e. CC By and
> public domain), but in turn it also allows full geodata
> roundtripping between government-crowd-commercial.
how can you ensure roundripping back from commercial to crowd and gov without
an SA licence? or do you mean with roundtripping gov-crowd-corporatelockin?
> Other references: http://www.ausgoal.gov.au/the-ausgoal-licence-suite -
> "Among those, the Creative Commons Attribution Licence (CC BY) [...]
> provides the greatest opportunities for re-use of information"
i'd like to see the study that is the foundation for this statement.
--
gpg: https://www.ctrlc.hu/~stef/stef.gpg
gpg fp: F617 AC77 6E86 5830 08B8 BB96 E7A4 C6CF A84A 7140
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