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At this early stage in the project, it is in principle still possible to change the license from GFDL to something else. I would favor releasing Wiktionary texts into the public domain. This way, the maze of slightly incompatible licenses out there is radically cleared, and the attribution requirements of the GFDL, which are not quite clear anyway, would be avoided. If every article is seen as a separate GFDL work, then the GFDL requires for instance that the title of any article be changed if the article is modified. On the other hand, if the whole Wiktionary is seen as a single GFDL work, then anybody who uses articles from it has to acknowledge the main contributors to Wiktionary. See GFDL.
Of course, releasing the texts into the public domain implies that anybody can do anything with them, including republishing under a restrictive license.
Is there any support for releasing Wiktionary texts into the public domain?
AxelBoldt 22:41 Dec 14, 2002 (UTC)
come up very often. The incompabilities are resolved for users of Wiktionary texts: they could use the information in any way they see fit. AxelBoldt
than the GFDL, but I don't think using PD would help that much. Maybe the GPL
is a solution (which can be applied to non-programs if the source is clearly
defined, which in our case it is) --Imran 23:45 Dec 14, 2002
(UTC)
Using copyleft licenses like the GPL and GFDL is a deliberate political act that forces those who would profit freely from our labors to allow others to continue to derive the same profit from their additions. If Wiktionary is to use a different license than GFDL, it must provide the same type of protections or I will have nothing more to do with it. (Using a different license, of course, will complicate sharing content with Wikipedia.) Ultimately it's up to Jimbo (and if it's ever created, the Wikipedia Foundation) if it's to remain linked to the Wikipedia project and server. --Brion VIBBER 00:00 Dec 15, 2002 (UTC)
I wouldn't contribute to a project knowing that somebody could steal and hijack my work and call it their own - as if I didn't exist or matter. The whole point of the GFDL is to ensure that text is free and will remain so forever.
Placing things into the public domain defeats this aim and worst, encourages others to fork our work instead of adding to it. --mav
But it wouldn't be "stealing and hijacking" if you freely invite them to it :-) Philosophically, one could argue that information can't be owned and therefore can't be hijacked or stolen. Public domain works also "remain free forever"; it's just the changes that someone else adds to them that could become non-free. AxelBoldt
mirror it on their site and apply a restrictive license to it. Or they could merge it with a dictionary they are selling. It is the GFDL that produces a sense of community and encourages contribution. I very much doubt that Wikipedia would have grown so much if it had been in the public domain. I'm strongly against PD. -- Arvindn 09:10 Dec 20, 2002 (UTC)
not always seem expedient, but it's there to protect your freedoms against abuse. One should not toss either away lightly. --Brion
The public domain also allows projects like Wiktionary to start with a base of words and definitions from public domain dictionaries, without having to wring our hands about license incompatibilities.
want on material derived from a public domain source? The original versions are still public domain, but modifications made here under our license are protected by our copyright and license. --Brion 01:34 Dec 21, 2002 (UTC) Both copyleft and the public domain have their place. I believe a copyleft license is best for this project. The GFDL isn't the only game in town. There's also the Design Science License and the Open Publication License. However, there's no compelling reason to use either of these over the GFDL, and they would make Wiktionary incompatible with Wikipedia. If we want to avoid the complexity of the GFDL, there's the option of using the new Creative Commons license selector. For example, here's a [http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-sa/1.0-legalcode a simple copyleft license] that allows redistribution, modification and commercial use, while requiring attribution. -- Stephen Gilbert 01:04 Dec 21, 2002 (UTC) -----
An alternative suggestion, use the GFDL but limit our copyright to say 10-20 years, after all as things stand atm for practical purposes what we're developing now won't fall out of copyright for almost two centuries (probably around 2179 to be a bit more precise) by which time I expect most of us will be long long past caring what happens to Wiktionary. --Imran
FSF and released a new version of the GFDL that allows them to reuse all GFDL'd material proprietarily without releasing it back to the community. Since all living human beings will be their employees, though, everyone will be free to use it as they wish.
import GFDL'd material from other sources, or the limit is contaminated and the exact provenance of each 20-year-old entry has to be researched by a future vulture to see if it's still protected. I don't think that's a practical solution; better to assume it's all protected and work to make that true. --Brion
I don't think that we'll be using a significant amount from either of them. Including a term which releases it into the PD sometime into the future could be very useful if some flaw is found in the GFDL which stops development
could retroactively reassign copyright over all public domain material to the Disney Public Domain Repository Corporation. (We don't want to confuse people with all this legally copyable material! Keeping it around would require leaving copyable channels open, which is just one big loophole which evil hacker terrorist criminals can exploit to pillage poor helpless media corporations. Remember, Osama and Saddam LIKE it when you download warez, mp3z, and ripped DVDz!)
various times (for instance note the DTD section fails to require the Stylesheet to be GFDL and the lack of information on the handling of "fair use" material), the GFDL was designed for manuals and we're on dodgy grounds using it anyway, I'm happy enough using it for short term materials, but I think we need a get out clause in case a problem does come up.
fails.
thanks. We've already got non-free dictionaries.
wiktionary fails I'd rather a non-free group took it over then no-one doing so and all of the effort we're putting in being wasted. If a Wiktionary survives then they have a twenty year head start, and bluntly if we can't in twenty years produce a better dictionary then someone who starts from the same point as us and produces a non-free dictionary in a few years then we have no business producing a dictionary.
years in the future when we ourselves are using the 90 year old Webster as a basis. --Imran.
as they share alike. --Brion
even have the ability to choose a more/less liberal copyleft license. --Imran 23:49 Dec 22, 2002 (UTC)
What would be the legal implications of copying between a GPL work and a GFDL work? There is a rather complete Esperanto dictionary at with many translations into national languages, licensed under the GPL. -- AdamRaizen 14:18 Jul 8, 2003 (UTC)
It must be too late to respond, but I face the same issue though, honestly speaking, I hate getting involved in legal problems. I searched on the net and found the following article: [http://lwn.net/Articles/30787/ When "Free" Isn't Good Enough]. This says that the GFDL is incompatible with the GPL. Due to the license incompatibility, it is difficult to embed GFDL-ed stuffs in a GPL-ed program. But I'm not sure if we have a trouble with incorporating GPL-ed documents into GFDL-ed ones. --Nanshu 00:37, 2 Sep 2003 (UTC)
I want to make template articles based on Unicode's Unihan database. Does it conflict with the GFDL? Quote from http://www.unicode.org/Public/UNIDATA/Unihan.txt
distribution and to freely use the information supplied in the creation of products supporting Unicode. Unicode, Inc. specifically excludes the right to re-distribute this file directly to third parties or other organizations whether for profit or not. --Nanshu 00:37, 2 Sep 2003 (UTC)
for a derivated work.
Dunno what the Gnu Free Document License involves or implies, and I don't really have the time to get involved. However, you might wish to be aware that http://open-dictionary.com/ seems to basically be cc of Wiktionary content with Google ads strapped on. I imagine, however, that you will object to his copyright notice at the very least. Handle as you see fit. -- Best wishes, Nils Jeppe 212.202.51.23 00:12, 31 Mar 2004 (UTC)
Why is it that unlike the main commons, Wiktionaries do not require -- and at any rate don't display -- licensing information for picture/media uploads? Is this intentional?
To update latter-day readers, note that as per meta:Licensing update, Wikimedia licenses have changed to dual-licensing GFDL/CC-BY-SA (Creative Commons Attribution/Share-Alike).