Thread:Terminology (2)

I'm not sure that I buy into the argument that CC-BY is a "non-libre" license.

It doesn't violate or restrict the essential freedoms and I would prefer to label CC-BY as a "libre" license.

Clearly NC and ND are "non-libre" licenses because they violate the essential freedoms.

There is strong opinion on both sides of the SA fence (within the libre friendly community). I don't think that its productive to have the SA versus non-SA teams at loggerheads -- we should respect the core freedoms of choice. I see the CC-BY and CC-BY-SA proponents as two sides of the same "libre" coin. They choose to emphasise freedom from different nuances -- and as an educationalist, I think this is healthy.

I prefer an approach like the Free Cultural Works Definition (not unlike the list of FSF compatible licenses) where we say "the following licenses meet the requirements of the essential freedoms". Incidentally -- Benjamin Mako Hill, who co-author of the Free Cultural Works Definition is a member of the FSF board (I'm sure you know this -- but readers of the list may not). WMF and WE have subscribed to the Free Cultural Works Definition -- the point being that the core freedoms are the foundations for deciding what is libre and what is not. The licenses are arbitrary.