Graaf Statler wrote:Of course we must not mock Abd. It is a extreem intelligent and friendly man and absolute integer and with many things he claims I complete agree.
And where we disagree I think I can hardly blame Abd for. Because that is about the extreme tricky and complex European copyright what American peeps and other users enter without noticing that themself because of the global CC license. A not official recognised licence what gives not any protection. With content checked by wikiidiots and free loaders.
And it is the same with Euro users, I have noticed often they don't realise themself Wikipedia is based on American Common Law, but they are physical under the European jurisdiction with all it's risks and without any protection.
Graaf, in case people have not noticed, is
reactive. It appears to be common that he does not understand what I've written, but imagines that he does, and he disagrees strongly with what he imagines. He is not the only person to do that!
So then he provides reams of arguments and evidence to "prove" that "Abd is wrong." I read the evidence (almost always I read evidence, especially from people who disagree with me) and I agree with everything, or I make comments, such as commentary on that kid who got whacked with a Euro 10,000 compensation, that something was off about that case, but that we didn't have enough information to know, and somehow Graaf interpreted this to mean "You can violate copyright and you are completely safe. Go ahead! La la la!" Which I have never said and don't think.
And I've explicitly written about American law and Graaf seems to think that I am contradicting Dutch law. The rules are different, they vary with jurisdiction, and jurisdiction in a case of internet violations can be complicated. I have pointed out that someone re-using content from Commons, relying on the Commons claim that it's free for commercial use, might be naive and might suffer losses. As Graaf knows, EU law may be moving more toward U.S. practice, which is more balanced, reflecting current internet realities. The actual situation may vary with jurisdiction. I'm in the U.S. and as a nonprofit user, am pretty safe. If I violate, my domain host will get a takendown notice and their normal practice is to pass it on to me, and I'll take it down. If I don't, they will and also risk loss of hosting. They don't like to have to take stuff down, it takes staff time, and I have cheap hosting!
But can this be a reason to give us a Office Ban and publish our names on a name and shame list under a CC licence? What contains the names of people who did really ugly things and without even giving the reason why we are banned?.
And that is where this law case is about. We are amateurs, two old grumbling man who have become behind the wiki curtain best friend. We only disagree about European copyright, that is all, but for the rest not. Yes, about the trinity but in a extreem mild way and has nothing to do with this matter.
If Graaf argued on the wikis as he argued on the Discord server and perhaps here, his ban might indeed have something to do with copyright. However, while the ban list is published under a CC license, that is irrelevant. It is content provided by the Foundation. It is not exempt under Section 130 of the Communications Decency Act. The license under which a libel is released is not relevant to "libel." My ban has absolutely nothing to do with copyright. Copyright will not be mentioned in any court proceedings, I expect. Some of the proceedings, if this goes into discovery, will be confidential, I expect, not to be published. I already have one piece of information that if I published it could lead to a contempt citation. So I won't!!!
If the court wants to keep a fact private -- and they do about some things -- do not fuck with the court! Bad Idea!
As to the trinity, Graaf is assuming, again, that he knows my position and understands it. He does not. I'll just leave it there. This is a theological argument and it is fourteen hundred years old. It has nothing to do with the price of eggs in China.
(by the way, I do not hold back from using Americanisms, or what might be such. As in this case, I will often check to see that one can find an interpretation with Google. In the US, it is "eggs." In the U.K., it is "tea" and that was probably the original expression.)