Archive:Should we permit or disallow commercial use of CZ-originated articles?

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Revision as of 01:45, 24 March 2007 by imported>Stephen Ewen (→‎Rebuttal)
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Policy argument summary started March 23, 2007

The issue explained neutrally

At issue is the question whether entities may use (some of) our articles, under our standard license, for commercial purposes. There is no question that we do and will always permit noncommercial use of our content.

More particularly, should we use CC-by-nc, on the one hand, or CC-by-sa or GFDL, on the other, for articles that are not required to be licensed otherwise? For those articles that began life on Wikipedia, we are required to use the GFDL. For articles that make no use of Wikipedia content, we need not use the GFDL.

Affirmative: permit commercial use

Argument: Commercial use permits maximum distribution of content.

Elaborate the argument here.

Reply: The Citizendium website is maximum distribution.

Elaborate the reply here.

Argument: A noncommercial license is incompatible with Wikipedia.

Reply: There's no good reason to prefer to let Wikipedia use our articles.

We are not in competition with WP, nor are we a branch of WP. What we are is a separate but similar project, with the same general goal of producing a free public encyclopedia by community writing and revision, but the specific goal of producing one with controlled expert review. There are good reasons to have both, and therefore they should both be done optimally after their different fashions. We want our project to be as good as possible, so we wish to use good attributed copyright-free material from other sources, subject to our editing and review. We also want to encourage their project to be as good as possible, and therefore want them to use whatever of our material may serve their good purposes, realizing that they will be subject to their processes of editing.

Rebuttal

Citizendium is, in fact, in competition with Wikipedia, and failure to recognize this is a failure to fully recognize and appreciate the nature and aims of the Citizendium project. Citizendium is much more than just a safe harbor away from the tempest of Wikipedia - much more than just a better working environment - in which to create better articles for re-importation into Wikipedia. Choosing a licensing option for Citizendium's original article's that is incompatible with Wikipedia's GDFL is crucially important if competition is to have its rightful effect on both projects.

Following are three possible ways to view the relation between Citizendium and Wikipedia:

  1. Cooperative. Anything on CZ can go into WP, and vice-versa. This is the route of the GDFL or a compatible license such as CC-by-sa.
  2. Competitive. This would require Citizendium to totally reject use of the GDFL or a compatible license such as CC-by-sa. No sharing would be possible, either from Wikipedia to Citizendium, or vice-versa.
  3. Partially competitive and partially cooperative. This would be best facilitated by CC-by-nc for original Citizendium articles and GDFL for Wikipedia-sourced ones. For original Citizendium articles, we cannot use Wikipedia content, and in the same way they cannot use ours. Like with like. For Wikipedia-sourced articles we improve and approve, Wikipedia can take them back up from Citizendium. Again like with like.

We should reject options #1 and #2 as extreme positions in favor of the balanced option #3. Option #3 avoids lopsidedness in favor of Wikipedia while ensuring a fair relation. Wikipedia is free to take back whatever article's originated with them, but cannot take all Citizendium content, because Citizendium original article's would be excluded by licensing. This and only this ensures that Citizendium article creation system can retain its competitive advantage over Wikipedia's. If Wikipedia can simply copy over Citizendium's entire corpus, they will be largely alleviated of the motivation they need to make policy changes. Insular entities rarely change except via external pressures. If Citizendium operates within option #1 in its relation with Wikipedia, that possibility will be much less likely. We will essentially be enablers of a dysfunctional system.

Diminishing the element of competition between Citizendium and Wikipedia is not only bad for Citizendium and Wikipedia, it is terrible for information consumers. Through the Goggle-effect, the Web is overrun with Wikipedia materials. Citizendium should concern itself to help remedy that problem. CC-by-nc is a main way to ensure competition does its rightful psychological and subsequent practical work for both Citizendium and Wikipedia. And that competition stands to greatly improve life for millions of information consumers over the way things stand now.

Negative: disallow commercial use

Argument: Commercial use would permit people to profit on the backs of volunteers.

Elaborate the argument here.

Reply: With an appropriate license choice, the community is paid back with similar access and rights to all extensions and derivatives of their work

Reply: There is nothing wrong with commercial use.

Elaborate the reply here.

Argument: If contributors share copyright, the Citizendium Foundation could relicense articles commercially.

Elaborate the argument here.

Reply 1: Then the Citizendium Foundation, too, is profiting on the backs of volunteers.

Elaborate the reply here.

Rebuttal:

Counter-rebuttal:

Reply 2: But contributors should not be required to share copyright.