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This is a discussion on "Diku license" in the Top Mud Sites Legal Issues forum : KaVir: Originally Posted by I am also saying that until tested in a court of law, there is no way to know which interpretation is correct - and regardless of how you like it, that is the way the law works. You make repeated and public claims that Medievia is in violation of the Diku and Merc licenses when no court has ever found them to be so. Yet now you're suddenly arguing that we need a court to find out what the license means when the wording is much clearer in this case ("profit") than in other ... |
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#61 | |||
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Member
Join Date: Sep 2002
Posts: 98
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KaVir:
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Yet now you're suddenly arguing that we need a court to find out what the license means when the wording is much clearer in this case ("profit") than in other points you choose to pursue in other license arguments regarding something comparatively vague like "login sequence". The fact is that you're probably right on those other things and wrong here: you may need a court decision to be 100% sure (and even then there are other jurisdictions) but for simple licenses/contracts you can get awfully close to 100% by reading the document. Quote:
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Are you saying that you agree with Tyche and Kaylus1's interpretation that revenue is fine as long as the use is noncommercial and doesn't generate a profit? My claims are very close to those of Tyche and Kaylus1. "Commercial use" is, almost as an axiom, intended to be "for profit." Stilton |
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#62 | |
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Legend
Join Date: Apr 2002
Name: Richard
Location: München
Home MUD: God Wars II
Posts: 1,532
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My stance on this matter has always been that I defend the intentions of the author, whenever such intentions are known, at least until such time as a court determines a ruling to the contry. |
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#63 | ||
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But the implications of that would be that it would be impossible for a proprietorship, corporation, or LLC to run a Diku server regardless of whether they charged for the service or not. For example, IBM or Bob's Hardware could not run a DikuMud server as a customer service or even internal message board. However a not-for-profit corporation or educational institution could run a DikuMud server regardless of whether they charged for the service or not. For example, a church, or the Boy or Girl Scouts of America could run a DikuMud and solicit donations via that medium. I'm really suggesting that all the talk about a commercial entity operating a Dikumud at a loss is moot if interpreted as for non-commercial use only. And that for-profit corporations and propreitorships cannot run DikuMud without violating the license. But of course the combination of lawyers and judges and money makes any result possible. |
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#64 | |
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It's also been ignored that the license can be revoked at anytime by the Diku group as it contains no provisions for unlimited use. It could also be reissued under new license by them. |
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#65 | ||||
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Join Date: Sep 2002
Posts: 98
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KaVir:
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Tyche: Quote:
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Stilton |
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#66 |
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Member
Join Date: May 2002
Location: Mississippi USA
Posts: 142
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I perceived the original post that started this free-for-all as “We slapped Medievia on TMS, Aardwolf is doing similar and allowed to survive here, why?” That’s actually a valid point regardless of what ulterior motives if any, might have prompted it.
Strictly speaking from my own observations of the Medievia discussions and this one, there is a huge difference in degree, intent and implications between the two. I wouldn’t even risk comparing the two usually without first lighting my own barbecue pit in preparation for the roasting I would get. Should Synozeer treat them both the same way or others doing exactly the same thing as Aardwolf? I don’t think he has either the time or patience to become “the board cop” especially when the community is so divided and without legal precedent to guide us. I think when push comes to shove someday in the courts; the discussions and resultant community standards that we establish will have great weight in the courts. Towards that eventuality, we hash and rehash the same points over and over just like this board was meant to do. We learn a bit more each time it’s discussed and I think that’s healthy and should rarely result in a shunning unless blatant theft of code is involved and proven. That shouldn’t mean condoning advertised violations of licenses since if you chip at the tree it eventually falls over, it means keep it out in the open and discuss it, we all benefit. |
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#67 | |
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Legend
Join Date: Apr 2002
Name: Richard
Location: München
Home MUD: God Wars II
Posts: 1,532
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As an example, SCO currently claims that the GPL is invalid. On that basis, which do you think would be the more appropriate course of action? (1) ignore the GPL and do whatever you like with code that had previously been protected by it, or (2) continue to follow the GPL until such time as it is proven to be invalid. |
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#68 |
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Senior Member
Join Date: Aug 2002
Posts: 252
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Do you consider the legality of something to be more important then the morality of it?
I think morals far outweigh laws, but then again morals do tend to be extremly different from person to person. |
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#69 | |||
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Member
Join Date: Sep 2002
Posts: 98
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You are the one who wants the license to mean more than is actually written into it. You have the burden of proof, and have thus far failed to attempt to meet it. Quote:
John: Quote:
Stilton |
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#70 | |||
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Legend
Join Date: Apr 2002
Name: Richard
Location: München
Home MUD: God Wars II
Posts: 1,532
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#71 | |||
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Member
Join Date: Sep 2002
Posts: 98
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KaVir:
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You have not provided anything at all to justify your redefinition of "profit" to mean "gross profit" or your subsequent redefinition of "gross profit" to apparently mean total revenue. Quote:
If you believe that the emails you have from one or two contributing authors as to intent are factually relevant, please come up with a cite. Quote:
Stilton |
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#72 | |
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Legend
Join Date: Apr 2002
Name: Richard
Location: München
Home MUD: God Wars II
Posts: 1,532
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However here is a cite for you: http://www.blupete.com/Law/Commentaries/C/TermsImp.htm In particular (from Wallace v. United Grain Growers Ltd., [1997] 3 S.C.R. 701) "...terms may be implied on the basis of custom or usage, presumed intention, and as legal incidents of a particular class or kind of contract, the nature and content of which have to be largely determined by implication" and "the implication of a term as legal incident need only be necessary in the sense that it is required by the nature of the contract rather than the presumed intentions of the particular parties". Now note the part of the Diku license which states "By breaking these rules you violate the agreement between us and the University". The question then becomes, what was their agreement with the University. |
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#73 | |
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Senior Member
Join Date: Feb 2003
Location: Sweden
Home MUD: www.sharune.com
Posts: 304
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I might actually call DIKU and check what they say. It is even likely that their IS NO agreement between the DIKUmud team and the DIKU university regarding the software, just because there doesn't need to be one. They may have written this poorly because they thought they couldn't use their software as they wish... I know some people at our university think the same, even though we're free to do whatever we want with it. Who would want to do projects or other univeristy materials or research IF the things you research cannot be used commercially? A restrictive rule like that (which is the "intent" of the diku licence) would severely harm the progress of technology. Take for example if DIKUmud was actually a medical tool to cure cancer or similar. No hospitals could use it, because they were prohibited to use it commercially. Whatta pile of horsedung. |
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#74 | |
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#75 |
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Legend
Join Date: Apr 2002
Name: Richard
Location: München
Home MUD: God Wars II
Posts: 1,532
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Yup Kastagaar, I think it's common over our side of the pond - I've even heard of students deliberately "failing" their courses because they decided to sell their final projects to a company for large sums of cash (and thus had to pretend that they hadn't actually done any work).
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#76 |
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Member
Join Date: Apr 2002
Posts: 123
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This whole debate seems like a no-brainer to me. The spirit of diku and circle is uncommercial, and simply put, the creators of those didn't want games where individuals could buy their way to any sort of in-game advantage, even if those funds are put to good "everyone will benefit from it" use.
This doesn't at all preclude players and imms getting together to buy a better server, more memory. The latter is just a nice cooperative venture for people, both imms and players, to make their favourite hangout a bit zippier. Having spearheaded such a fundraising effort myself, that was the reply I got when I contacted Olsen to check if what I was doing was ok. He was cool with it - so long as there wasn't any in-game gain. |
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#77 |
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New Member
Join Date: Oct 2003
Posts: 3
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The intent of the license is of minimal importance in court - not totally unimportant, but certainly less important than the actual wording. This, after all, is why we have contracts at all and why people pay lawyers to write and interpert them.
The fact that they were non-english speaking students doesn't really matter - the license is as it is, and if it doesn't make thier intent clear, then thats tough luck. Theres a variety of ways that the profit clause can be interperted - the others are pretty cut and dried. Obviously, a US court is likely to use the IRS definition of profit, as Stilton posted. Something to bear in mind is that the license does NOT make a difference between donations for in-game benefit and donations in general. If you make money off of running your DIKU mud, then you're in violation. Period. Note also that the license doesn't care about commercialism per se, only profit. The Diku's team intentions, as quoted by KaVir are more about commercialism than profit, so it was a poor choice of words on thier part. However, the quote provided (that by providing an in game reward it becomes a commercial transaction and not a donation) doesn't reflect US law that I'm aware of. For example, the "free gifts" you recieve by making donations to any variety of nonprofit organizations. One last point - reading the license and then acting on your own interertation of it is actually the normal course of action (well, having your legal counsel read it, anyway). Thats another reason why, in general, they're written to be unambiguous. If the other party to the license doesn't like the way you're interpeting the license, then the normal recourse is negotiations and then court if it can't be resolved through discussion. The SCO/IBM case is an excellent example of this - SCO tells IBM that they believe IBM has violated thier license, IBM replies that they have not, and the case procedes from there. The license certainly does NOT mean what KaVir says it does. It means what it says. KaVirs interpertation is (of course) legally meaningless - even the Dikus team is only meaningful in that they have the power to go to court if they want to. |
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#78 |