How to Stop Commerial Use of Copyleft Materials?
An anonymous reader writes "The Guild Wiki, an extremely popular fan-made wiki for documenting the Masssively Multiplayer game Guild Wars, was originally supported by donations, then later advertisements — supposedly just enough to break even. Just the past week, the owner of the domain name surprised this wiki community by revealing that he had sold the domain name, the database, and his services to Wikia, a commercial entity that intends to profit from Guild Wiki's content. The catch? Much of Guild Wiki's content falls under Creative Commons by-nc-sa license, which denies the commercial use of licensed material. Arena.net created their own community run wiki to serve as the in-game help system, because they didn't think they could use the material on Guild Wiki commercially. If Wikia continues to serve ads over Guild Wiki's content, how can the thousands of contributors to the site stop them without going to the expense/trouble of hiring attorneys (or the crude path of mass vandalism)? If it turns out the site owner has been making a profit all along from ads, what's the remedy?"
Send a DMCA take down notice to the hosting provider since the contents of the website infringe on your copyright? :) You shouldn't even need a lawyer for that, as there are plenty of RIAA and MPAA examples floating around...
Donate free food here
From what you say the site owner is making money from advertising, not directly from the content (e.g. by selling it). Now I understand that the authors of the content probably wouldn't be happy with the site owner making a profit even indirectly from advertising (which is only possible owing to the presence of their content on the site) but whether they can stop him presumably depends on the exact wording of their CC license. If the license doesn't stop him making this indirect profit then there is nothing they can do. I guess it should just serve as a warning to others to ensure that the license you release something under exactly matches your intent for how you want to allow it to be used.
"'I pass the test,' she said. 'I will diminish, and go into the West, and remain Galadriel.'"
- JRR Tolkien.
You can't destroy a wiki with vandalism. A simple script can roll every single page back to a particular date, and then it can all be locked. You can ruin the community aspect of it, and presumably take away a great deal of the value assuming Wikia believe they're buying the community rather than merely the content, but if Wikia think the content is finished and in a state where they can sell it (through advertising) then there's little that can be done.
Except...
The authors of the wiki pages are the owners of their content, and as such they're free to put their content onto the other wiki. They're free to put it onto 1000 other wikis. With some SEO expertise it should be possible to make Wikia's purchase completely worthless because noone would ever see it, so noone would ever view any of their adverts.
http://twitter.com/onion2k
...are specific in usage restrictions. I can see this going to court. In which case, I root for the users. The commercial entity isn't /asking/ permission to use the material, it's stating its /intention/ to violate the license under which the material is posted. Screw the users. Not the way to run a business if you want to stay in business.
Operation Guillotine is in effect.
As much as I'm appalled by the legal incongruencies involved, the deal seems to be rather fair towards the contributors (except that they didn't get $$$ - but did they ever expect money in return for CC-NC content?)
... don't turn this place into a land of "lawyers and order".
I mean, Jimbo Wales is no idiot about Wikis (and seemed very down to earth guy when I met him). As much as this might be legal wrangling in the hands of the original owner, if I were a contributor I wouldn't be calling my lawyers. The ideal solution would be for the Wikia folks to ask for CC-SA (striking the NC) relicensing from all authors - in a classic King Solomon solution, by putting up a static data dump on torrents & offering to take down content of any contributor who objects from the wiki version.
But not the lawyers
Quidquid latine dictum sit, altum videtur
Fork 'Em
Just to clarify, copyleft ("SA" in CC terms) does not prevent commercial use at all. The problem here is the noncommercial ("NC") clause, which is something completely different.
IAAAL - I am actually a lawyer
My question is why the sudden change of heart about commercial use? It is stated that the site has had advertising, so why is it okay for the old site owner to put advertising on the site, but not okay for the new owner to put advertising on the site? The older owner may not have made a lot of money of the site (at least he claims he didn't, I doubt anyone but him really knows) but his intention was obviously commercial, as shown by his selling of the site and cashing in. It seems to me the license of being broken before and no one cared about it, so why is okay for the former owner to break the license bu not okay for the new owner?
"Information wants to be expensive" - Stewart Brand, the same guy who said "Information wants to be free"
... the software industry?
1) come out with useful but buggy software
2) have buying customers users report bugs and make suggestions for improvements
3) sell upgrades back to them.
4) don't pay them for any of their work
5) Copyright and patent teh improvements you got from the users.
6) do like autodesk, don't allow the customer/users to sell their used software.
Here you have game players doing a bunch of documentation for free on a game that is commercial.
The web site made money off of the unpaid efforts of the documentators efforts in on site advertising and the sale of the site.
step Seven:
lock down the documentation and site and require all contributors to pay a monthly fee for access.
How can the contributors respond?
Copy the site to another location and sue the pants off of any attempt to stop this.
Using the DMCA to shut the site down is contradictory to the original intent of the contributors.
Consumer deception was applied by the site owner.
Forget that... did anyone notice that Wikia can smash this down in court on grounds that they were defrauded by the seller? After all, he must have lied to them about the license on the material in the product sold to them.
:)
Of course seller here can hammer Wikia with a "you bought a bill of goods and didn't do your *due diligence* on the subject, and are thus to blame for buying what you can't sell".
Irony at its best, but then again, this is slashdot, I wonder how many of you can actually negociate contracts
" What luck for rulers that men do not think" - Adolf Hitler
Obviously, IANAL.
From the FP, it sounds like you have two separate situations here.
First, you had free hosting that came with a domain name (and probably some form of basic administration in the setting up of the Wiki and keeping it running smoothly - Though your community may have separated those four "services").
Second, you have user-provided CC-nc content that happens to live on the above-provided set of services.
Your community (individually, keep in mind) "owns" the latter. You have no rights at all to the former (though your could argue the domain name itself as a trademark, I highly doubt you registered it as such, and the courts always favor the party who will actually use it for, y'know, "trade" over any nonprofit use.
So as much as you may object to this change, no one has actually violated your copyrights, yet. Your domain owner and admin sold their services, not your content ("the database" can have multiple meanings; you should generally presume a legal one until proven otherwise). Thus, you have two choices, as I see it:
1) Do nothing, and accept banner ads as the price of your hosting.
2) Inform the new owner of your intent, as a group, to disallow them the use of your content. Begin removing it from the current servers and move it elsewhere (a variation of what you called "mass vandalism").
In the case of #2, if Wikia starts doing massive rollbacks to "preserve" content you have every right to remove, then you can cry copyright infringement, and may want to hire a lawyer (this seems like a perfect class-action situation, if you can get anyone to take the case for such small stakes, since you don't actually want any cash for it, you just want an injunction against use of it by Wikia). They may, however, play it perfectly fair. They might expect to lose 10-25% of the community, and treat the rest well enough to stay and even recover over a few months.
But mostly, you should probably wait for an actual infringement before crying wolf.
It's funny. A while ago, probably not long after Google bought out Deja News, there was some bad feeling from Usenet contributors who felt that their content had been sold, and others were basically profiteering on the back of their work. A few custom services were also popping up, which reproduced the content on certain Usenet groups but splatted those irritating ad-links all over key words in the content. When I suggested that this was inappropriate in a discussion here, a whole load of people basically told me to STFU because once I'd posted the content on Usenet I should have known that was going to happen.
I pointed out that at the time Deja started keeping its archive, I (and many others) would not necessarily have been aware of it, and might reasonably have expected articles to expire after a few days (as they did at the time on pretty much all ISPs' Usenet servers). I was directed to the relevant RFCs and told that they said content could be kept effectively indefinitely, and that this was more important than the industry standard practice at the time that users would actually have experienced.
I pointed out that the only licence anyone had to copy my and others' copyrighted content from Usenet was the implicit one granted by posting in the first place, and that it was questionable whether this covered commercial use or for that matter the RFC-sanctioned archival if most people using the system didn't know that could happen. This, too was our problem, I was told.
I pointed out that splatting the hyperlink ads all over the content degraded the content and certainly would not be expected on a normal Usenet system. This, apparently, was just fair use, and the fact that US-style fair use doesn't even apply in my country (where some of the material was being posted) didn't matter.
The critics' conclusion: Too bad, get over it, you have no legal rights.
My conclusion #1: Don't ask Slashdot about legal rights, ask a lawyer.
My conclusion #2: Expect to get screwed by unethical/illegal business practices if you put your content on-line anywhere but you don't have big enough legal guns to defend it afterwards. But you should take what steps you can to minimise the effort required to defend your rights: including the non-commercial clause that applies here, for example.
My prediction: In the current, Web 2.0-ish world full of community-made content, there's going to be a lot of bad feeling sooner or later, as the numerous businesses who basically just host discussion facilities but then claim rights over the content start profiteering, potentially at the expense of those who wrote the material in the first place. The so-called "you write all the content, they keep all the money" model is a great deal for businesses but a lousy deal for the contributors, who tend to suffer from some idealistic illusion that their content is safe and the service they are supporting will continue to operate for their benefit even if it's not making enough money. A lot of people's feelings are going to get hurt as this happens more often, and this case is just the start.
My answer: If you want to share content on-line, always host it on your own terms. Don't use a commercial service for your blog, set up your own. It's almost as cheap and easy these days, and then there's no ambiguity about the ongoing hosting, the rights to the material, or the privacy implications of someone else holding potentially substantial amounts of personal data. If you want to set up a community site with friends, get a friendly geek to help you do so with your own web host, for the same reasons.
If you disagree, post your argument. (-1, Overrated) isn't your personal censorship tool for views you don't like.
The relevant part of the license is the following:
For starters I don't like this wording at all. It grants a right that is conditioned on the intent of the entity exercising the license which makes it horribly vague. Now obviously this passage prohibits the sale of the material (e.g. give me five bucks I'll give you this content) but what this means for other uses (like advertising) is extremely problematic. Moreover, it would be very very harmful if the courts read this license to prohibit the use of the material in a way that lets one gain commercial benefits because of the mere interest and popularity of the work.
Suppose for instance a bunch of documentation is released under this licensce for some open source software. If any use requiring the license that is motivated by commercial advantage even if the compensation is only indirect is bared then IBM would be barred from paying some of it's employees from adding to the documentation on the wiki. Sure the result of their action is just to help the project like anyone else but they motivation is to gain commercial advantage by improving documentation for their customers (along with everyone else) and they had to use the license to make the modifications (derivative work). Nor could any such project be hosted on google code or take advantage of google's summer of code. After all google's motivation in both projects is to elevate their corporate image and thus give them a competitive advantage. Hell, even contributing to the project to impress your boss or to learn how to write/code so you can get a better job would be banned.
Of course you could try to weasel about the meaning of the word "primarily intended" to avoid these consequences but then companies like this could do the same. If you get to weasel on this word they can simply weasel and say something like "yes we want to make profit but our primary intention is just to provide a commercially stable distribution mechanism for this product and that requires being a profitable company." There just isn't any good way to distinguish using the copyright to draw page views which draw ad revenue from using the copyright to look good so you draw customers without explicit language in the license to make this distinction. You can't make the license mean "whatever I find objectionable is off limits."
Ultimately I think we are all better off if the non-commercial aspect of this license is interpreted narrowly, i.e, it stops you from charging admission to a play you are putting on with this material, putting it on a CD and charging for that CD or other direct exchanges of value for the work. As for what you do in situations like this one, you don't whine about it.
I understand the motivation for not wanting people to charge for your work or to otherwise turn your work into a commercial product but that's not what's happening here. Intuitively (though not legally) this company isn't behaving much differently than google (or slashdot in hosting our comments). They are aren't suggesting that the content isn't free or making sure you have to pay them for the work. They are just making a profit in return for hosting the material. If you don't like the ads the obvious solution is to set up an ad free alternative.
If you liked this thought maybe you would find my blog nice too:
The point everyone seems to miss is that the works are *not* licensed to GuildWiki under the Creative Commons license. GuildWiki licenses the material to the general public under the CC license.
Under the TOS, contributers license GuildWiki the right to produce derivative works without -- as far as I can tell any restrictions except that GuildWiki's subsequent licensing of the material must under CC non-commercial.
Someone purchasing GuildWiki's rights would not be a sub-licensor. They would step into GuildWiki's shoes and as far as I can tell would even be able to sell CC-NC licenses if they wanted to.
A buyer is under no obligation to check facts provided by a seller. This includes verbal statements made during discussions. If someone makes a misrepresentation, and the misrepresentation is used in the decision making, then the legality of the contract is in question. The buyer should be able to get their money back and possibly damages as well. I am not a lawyer, just a geek who took a business law class. I think it is one of the most important classes I have taken.
Another reason not to use the creative commons license. Getting rewarded for your work is a shifty, problematic task.
Huh? What license do you suggest for people writing articles in a Wiki? And how would that license make it easier/better for the author to get rewarded in this situation?
If the govt becomes a lawbreaker, it breeds contempt for law, it invites man to become his own law, it invites anarchy
Well, while /.ers are quite aware of DMCA takedown notices, most find their deployment a distasteful tactic at best. I don't think it is an issue of awareness so much as an issue of commitment to principles. While the tactic is normally employed by scary and disreputable corporate drones, the landscape becomes more complicated when it is employed by the so-called "little guys". Takedown notices are just a tool in an arsenal: Is it the tool itself that is the problem, or just the people who usually employ it?
All the techniques ever used to make men moral have been themselves thoroughly immoral... (Nietzsche)
Okay, now that everyone's in a tizzy, let's bring some reason back to the discussion.
First of all, almost every game out there, including Guild Wars, states in its terms of service that you can use their game content for non-commercial purposes. However, the content remains the property of the game company. That means that if, for example, you post an article in a wiki that contains verbatim descriptions of things found in-game or in documentation otherwise produced by the game company, which most articles are, you have absolutely no right whatsoever to make a DMCA claim because the content is not yours to begin with. If, and that's a huge if, anyone has a right to serve a takedown notice, it would be NCsoft, the owner of the IP for Guild Wars.
Second of all, I too own a popular gaming wiki for City of Heroes, and I too am in the process of moving said wiki over to Wikia. There are many reasons, but among the top ones is the fact that the wiki is become too popular and is overloading my server. Response times are going down, pages aren't loading, and I'm already paying a decent sum of money every month out of my own pocket for a site that has clearly exceeded the capacity of a hobbyist site. At this point, I have one of three options:
Regarding option 1, I am not a salesman, nor do I ever want to be. Plus, I just want to concentrate on making the wiki a quality resource for the game's players, not making templates for ads and dealing with money transfers and all. Plus, as you can tell from the submitter's blurb, I don't want to have to deal with people accusing me of doing it for profit. Regarding option 3, I guess some might argue that it would be better to have the information lost forever or dispersed to the winds of the Internet so that it's a lot harder to find, but I don't think that making information less available is in the spirit of what the CC license is about, or the GFDL that the Paragon Wiki uses.
Third of all, all wikis are commercial at some point in the chain. For example, the hosting provider I'm currently using to host the Paragon Wiki isn't free. Could it be argued that because someone (i.e. my hosting provider) is making money off the wiki, it is therefore a commercial endeavor and must be removed? No, that's stupid. If you must, think of this change as the Paragon Wiki, and GuildWiki for that matter, simply changing hosting providers. Instead of me paying a hosting provider money, though, they are getting it through Google ads. I know some folks are going to be saying, "But he got paid and is getting company stock!" And I got paid, too. However, I think you're grossly overestimating the amount. In my talks with Wikia, they told me that they were going to reimburse me retroactively for my hosting costs for the wiki, to give me the money back that I sunk into it for the past couple of years. I did the math. Their number is actually slightly lower than the actual cost, but it's pretty close. I don't know the details (and don't care to) of how much Gravewit got for moving his sites over, but I strongly suspect that he's been paying more in hosting costs than I have, and that it was a similar arrangement, with the money plus the stock value being around the same as his retroactive hosting costs.
Fourth of all, the submitter's summary really portrays Wikia in a needlessly negative light. Can we please acknowledge that they are providing a valuable service here? They could pick and choose only sites that will make them millions in ad revenue to host, but that's not what they're doing. Anyone who wants to can start a new wiki on any topic that they think would build a community, whether that's a community of a billion people or a community of a hundred. They provide gr
There are many insidious things about modern copyright legislation in various jurisdictions, but I don't think immediate take-down notices are among them. Such notices are a natural consequence of the need to protect copyright in a world of effectively instant, effectively free transmission of copies with widespread abuse. The notices are just a legal tool, and like all tools, the mechanism itself is neutral and it's how it's used that matters.
(Please don't challenge that "need" now: it's how the law works today, and I don't think this is an appropriate article for the wider discussion.)
If you disagree, post your argument. (-1, Overrated) isn't your personal censorship tool for views you don't like.
Aside from things like quest text and screenshots (and that's debatable) pulled directly from the game, the sort of things put on these wikis would not be derivitave works any more than a book review would be.
I don't disagree with you in priciple, but the fact is that the people who wrote the articles licensed them to the wiki under specific terms, and it has a legal obligation to follow them. They can always start again with their own work.
Have you read most of the articles on these wikis? The vast majority of them are not critiques. They are, as I said, verbatim copies of texts and screenshots of images found within the games, or on official websites or within the game publishers' manuals. As such, the fair use protection doesn't apply.
At best, you might be able to come up with some kind of claim if you've used some sort of clever presentation of the information, but if you're just copied it over into a wiki, you most certainly have no claim on it.
Does the "left" in "Copyleft" have any meaning other than anti-copyright?
Dunno, but whoever invented the term was being very sinister...
This guy's the limit!
You're actually wrong. The license specifies extremely clearly that the materials cannot be copied for purposes "primarily intended for or directed toward commercial advantage or private monetary compensation." This would prohibit the initial installation of the data on a commercial server. Get a volunteer to install it and you're prevented from touching it again. Backups? Nope. Extra installations? Nope. Even if you outsourced the copying to an outside institution you could end up screwed if your server copies materials in the process of serving them, such as through database caches.
So sorry that you don't like it, but the CC-NC license is hostile to commercial use. I don't have any problem with this.
The reasonable defense for Wikia here is to claim that their use of the materials is not primarily intended for or directed towards commercial advantage. This is not an unreasonable claim considering that the company is not asserting ownership over the materials and is providing access to them free-of-charge. The CC license is ambiguous about what constitutes "primarily" commercial use however. The word "intended" is even more tricky.
Takedown notices are just a tool in an arsenal: Is it the tool itself that is the problem, or just the people who usually employ it?
There are very few tools in this world that are a problem if they are used by an informed conscientious individual, conversely there are very few tools that are safe when in the hands of a desperate megalomaniac.
We are all just people.
Let me get this straight: you want to enforce the legal requirements of the content license, but you don't want to use the legal system to do it. Sorry. If you want to enforce an agreement, you have to stand in front of a judge and show that the agreement is applicable and enforceable. (Retaining a lawyer is not mandatory, but is highly advisable.) There's no magical way to guarantee that everybody respects your rights as you see them.
Cheers, I understand what you're referring to, but I generally defer to my older resources as well. I find that actually behaving responsibly instead of expecting modern "lawmakers" to save me, has in fact saved me a LOT of cash, and a lot of headaches.
Care to tell me that I'm better off butting heads with some idiot in court and paying a lawyer to save me 30 minutes of due diligence???
If something is preventable then why go through court to justify something, and damaging one's health through stress and heartache, when one can research what one is accepting/agreeing to, and simply saying "nope, not worth my cash"... unless one precisely WANTS to get to court to try to iron things out using the lawmakers to hammer something into a small piece of profit...
I only go to court when I have to... which is roughly never. Preventable things, in my case, are just that... prevented. Thanks though. You've made my stay on slashdot, yet again, enjoyable.
" What luck for rulers that men do not think" - Adolf Hitler
Were I the site's developer, I would simply use a license that claimed copyright of everything on the site then let the purchaser battle it out.
Maybe I'm missing something here but copyright is the foundation the various licenses(cc, gpl, bsd, etc) are built on. A license is terms under which the author permits others to distribute his work.
I think what you are trying to saying is you would claim ownership of all material & submissions. This would be posted in the site's "Terms of Usage".
The most obvious examples of how it should have been done are Thottbot and WoWhead. Both were created to accept user submissions to build the site, both sold to IGE for barrels of cash. They don't support the creative commons license. Neither should this guy have.
Thottbot & WoWhead claimed ownership of all material & submissions. If they wanted to, they could license the material under creative commons and still retain/claim ownership of all materials & submissions.
The license isn't the problem. The problem the guy(& purchaser) run into, is who is the copyright owner of the material. The way the site was setup is the author of the article is the copyright owner. Which means for the website to be legally allowed to distribute(publish) the article, the author needs to give the website permission to do so. This is where the creative commons license comes into play.
Do you follow now?
If the govt becomes a lawbreaker, it breeds contempt for law, it invites man to become his own law, it invites anarchy