agarvin wrote: ↑Sun Apr 02, 2023 6:52 pm
I've contributed quite a bit to IMSLP over the years, and I've been happy to do so, but if I can't redistribute my work with a license that prevents commercial copying, I simply will not upload anything here again.
--Allen Garvin
Hello,
Since you have commented on it, I would like to tell you
why the NC licenses are deprecated on IMSLP, and the real-world impact on the commercialization of editions first published on IMSLP.
One problem is that the NC licenses are not generally accepted by other free-content sites (such as Wikimedia Commons, for example), nor are they accepted by the
Open Definition or the
Definition of Free Cultural Works. To the extent that IMSLP is a part of this larger group of sites, we should like for content to be able to be transferred between these sites (e.g., for recordings created by IMSLP users to be incorporable into Wikipedia). This has less of an effect on editions in particular, since these are less often directly imported into Wikimedia projects, but this issue does affect them to some extent as well.
The
real problem, however, is that the Creative Commons Non-Commercial license is
very ambiguous. While the other CC licenses have a pretty well-understood meaning, it is not clear exactly what constitutes non-commercial use for the purpose of the CC NC license. Creative Commons
argues this is an advantage: "The definition is intent-based and intentionally flexible in recognition of the many possible factual situations and business models that may exist now or develop later."
Here is an example list of uses, many of which are ambiguously compliant. It is our view (and the view of many of these other major free-content organizations) that ambiguity in licenses is a
major flaw. The user of a material may in many cases have little confidence in what the actual terms of the license are.
Now, in your case, your uploads on here are editions of existing public-domain works. You comment "All my work is CC BY-NC for the purpose of copying the music. There are no performance restrictions at all on it." This is more or less accurate, though it would be the case even had you not stated it; new editions of public domain music cannot carry with them performance restrictions, since the performance is of the original (public domain) creative work; copyright licenses only apply to material insofar as much as it is the copyrightable work of the licensor. (Moreover, new editions may or may not qualify for copyright at all, depending on the jurisdiction, but that's another matter unrelated to CC licenses.)
Now, we can certainly understand that users do not want to have the items which they upload onto IMSLP for free to be used in order to generate profit for a republisher. However, we believe that, in practice, this is virtually entirely accomplished by the Creative Commons Attribution-Share Alike license. The CC BY-SA license
does allow copies to be sold.
However, it requires that all copies be marked with the proper attribution and acknowledgment of the CC BY-SA license. Moreover, all derivative works (adaptations) must be released according to the CC BY-SA terms as well. By marking the work with the CC BY-SA license, the work is marked as redistributable and freely shareable. While copies are allowed to be sold, any copy sold must be marked as freely copiable itself. This
effectively prevents the vast majority of commercialization; since the work itself must always be marked as copiable, the existence of a free source of a copy (as well as the "copyleft" clause) prevents any real commercialization of the selling of copies.
This is very much the same principle in action with software under the GNU GPL. While it is perfectly legal to sell copies of GPL'd free software, they are very rarely in fact sold for a profit. To the small extent that they are sold at all, the cost of a copy is virtually always no more than the cost of the physical media onto which it is written.
In our estimation, very few CC BY-SA-licensed scores are actually offered for sale in the first place. The greater concern we have about the NC license relates to the distribution of scores in the course of their actual usage. For example, an ensemble wants to use a score for a performance. They have the score printed at a print shop. Is this "non-commercial," seeing that they are paying the print shop for the copies? This is not a mere hypothetical —
there was a real case on this very question, where a provider of CC NC content sued a print shop for copyright infringement when a school ordered photocopies of the CC NC-licensed content from the print shop. Although in that case it was decided that the print shop did not violate the license by printing copies for a school, this
hardly covers all similar scenarios and does not apply in other jurisdictions, which have interpreted this clause in different ways. This illustrates the reality of the problem in practice. This is not to say that
you would necessarily go around suing people for bringing your PDF to a print shop, but it
is a danger with the license.
Scores contributed to IMSLP will always remain available from IMSLP for free (as in
gratuit). Any CC BY-SA score must remain free (as in
libre) even if a specific copy is not offered
for free (as in
gratuit). The classic model of publishing is to sell copies of proprietary works protected by copyright law; because the user is not allowed to make copies (beyond fair-use exceptions), Because a CC BY-SA score cannot be made into a
proprietary work, and all copies must be marked as copiable, there is really little to no commercial market for the work
qua the work. 99.99% of CC BY-SA licensed works are never mass-printed in the first place, and are only ever special-ordered from print shops; those which are mass-printed cannot compete economically if they are sold for more than the cost of printing a copy, because people can always print it at home or at a print shop anyway for exactly that cost. (By the way, it has been argued by some that even the CC NC license allows selling copies for a fee, so long as this covers the cost of materials, though this is highly debatable.)
Meanwhile, because the CC licenses only allow usage on the basis of compliance with the terms, a copy or a derivative work of copyrighted CC BY-SA material which did not follow the requirements of release under CC BY-SA with attribution, license notice (indicating the freedom to copy, among other things), no addition of DRM, etc., would be subject to the same action as with any other infringement.
So the effect of the CC NC licenses, as opposed to CC BY-SA, is mostly to introduce incompatibility and significant legal ambiguities and difficulties with potential use, which create significant issues for potential users and incompatibility with other free-content repositories. But there is very little effect on the real-world commercialization of the work (as opposed to using CC BY-SA), because copies of CC BY-SA (when they are made, which is qute unusual to begin with) effectively cannot sell at a higher price than the real-world cost of printing (not to mention those who download will all do so for free, and many may never want to print out a copy at all).
In short: because copyleft in the form of CC BY-SA prevents
proprietary reuse, which
is well-defined, it prevents virtually all real-world profiting off of the content itself, while avoiding the real problems with the CC NC licenses
and being compatible with all major free-content initiatives.
Now, you are not obliged to continue to post new items onto IMSLP — that is your prerogative — but I hope you will understand the reasoning behind this policy and the real-world implications of the use of CC BY-SA.