Talk:Archive:Should authors share copyright with the Citizendium Foundation?
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Thanks for your work on this, Joseph. I find it quite useful. --Larry Sanger 20:43, 23 March 2007 (CDT)
- I'm very glad to be of help, thank you for your nice words. I'll add some more material tomorrow and also bring across relevant stuff into the commercial use discussion.
- If there's anything in this article that isn't clear or that needs expansion (or greater brevity:-) please let me know and I'll try to fix it. —Joseph Rushton Wakeling 21:45, 23 March 2007 (CDT)
I think I've covered everything really important now. Does anyone else have comments or suggestions? —Joseph Rushton Wakeling 20:31, 24 March 2007 (CDT)
The section titled "Citizendium does not have the principles or purpose of the Free Software Foundation" really isn't an argument so much as a loose polemic. Can it be reworded with premises and conclusion more clearly stated? --Larry Sanger 09:31, 29 March 2007 (CDT)
- I'll see what I can do. Someone else posted that argument and I already reworded the original to try to make it less polemic, more clear about the important issues. I'll see if I can put it better.
- The core issue that I can see is that the FSF does not request copyright for its own convenience but as a means of perpetuating programmers' intentions for their work (i.e. that it should be, and remain, free software). That contrasts with some of the reasons proposed for Citizendium requesting copyright.
- It might be better put as an extra part of the "reply", to clarify the issue, rather than as a "rebuttal", which it's not, really. —Joseph Rushton Wakeling 15:38, 29 March 2007 (CDT)
- OK, I've done a rewrite which I think is an improvement both stylistically and in terms of explaining the issues. It may even include some new arguments previously unvoiced. —Joseph Rushton Wakeling 17:52, 30 March 2007 (CDT)