1) The first line of my comment is that I don't speak for Linden legal. 2) What I said was that if you want to understand legalese, you should talk to a lawyer. That's it.
Q On Apr 1, 2010, at 4:54 AM, Gareth Nelson wrote: > An interesting point: > If a member of staff at LL is basically saying "none of you can > comprehend this policy", then that surely means none of us can > actually consent to agree to it. > > Q - you may have just provided some "fuel" for use in any future court case > > On Thu, Apr 1, 2010 at 8:42 AM, Morgaine <morgaine.din...@googlemail.com> > wrote: >> On 21st March, Q Linden explained to us that legalese is not a language >> amenable to "common sense" interpretation, and more specifically, that >> programmers like ourselves should not expect to understand this Linden TPV >> policy document using our normal logic and our normal dictionary. I'll >> repeat his words here for clarity: >> >> >> Kent Quirk (Q Linden) q at lindenlab.com >> Sun Mar 21 10:24:13 PDT 2010 >> >> I'm emphatically not a lawyer and I don't speak for our legal team. But: >> >> Legalese is a specialized language. It's not strictly English, and it's not >> always amenable to "common sense" interpretation. Think of lawyers as people >> who write code in an underspecified language for a buggy compiler, and you >> begin to understand why legalese is the way it is. There's a lot of law that >> isn't stated, but is actually implied by the context of the existing settled >> law. What that means is that if you're not a lawyer, you probably shouldn't >> be attempting to interpret legal documents -- especially not for other >> people. Similarly, if you're not a programmer, attempting to interpret >> program source code is a risky business. Programmers are especially >> susceptible to trying to interpret legal documents using a normal dictionary >> because they're logical thinkers. That doesn't always work. If you have >> legal questions about the implication of documents, you should ask a lawyer, >> not a mailing list. >> >> Similarly, any comment by one of Linden's lawyers in this forum or any other >> could possibly be treated as legally binding. That also goes for Linden >> employees, especially those with any seniority. So you're unlikely to get >> further remarks or "clarifications", except general statements that don't >> address specific questions. The policy was revised based on comments on this >> list and elsewhere. That's probably a pretty good indication that Linden >> Lab's lawyers now think it's clear enough to state its intent and to stand >> up in court if they need it to. >> >> Q >> >> >> I've been thinking about this extraordinary post and its relationship to our >> ongoing saga about the TPV, and I fail to see how any rational person could >> agree to something unknown, except under duress. Is it even legal to be >> required to agree to the incomprehensible? Does anyone know how the law >> works in this area? >> >> The GPL license was written by FSF lawyers specifically to be understood by >> programmers, so it's no surprise that the large majority of people here >> understand it. Given that Lindens claim that they are issuing a valid GPL >> license, perhaps one might accept that at face value, and assume that GPLv2 >> clauses 6, 7, 11 and 12 remain intact and valid. Therefore there are no >> "further restrictions" imposed on SL TPV developers (clause 6), and the "NO >> WARRANTY" clause (11-12) continues to protect developers from downstream >> liability, and no "conditions are imposed on you that contradict the >> conditions of this License" thus making the license valid (clause 7). >> >> Given the forgoing, the officially incomprehensible TPV document then no >> longer matters to SL TPV developers, because their rights and freedoms and >> lack of liability are determined entirely by the GPL. (It could be no other >> way anyway, since we are told that we cannot understand the TPV.) >> >> That leaves only the matter of users of TPVs behaving responsibly when they >> use TPV clients in SL, with which I'm sure every person on this list is >> happy to agree. (Note that developers become users when they connect to SL, >> and are bound by the same requirements as users.) When users do something >> bad with a TPV client, or indeed with a Linden client, then naturally they >> are personally responsible for their actions. >> >> In the absence of a TPV document that we can comprehend, perhaps this is the >> best that TPV developers can do, since agreeing to incomprehensible >> conditions is not something that any sensible person should consider. >> >> >> Morgaine. >> >> >> >> _______________________________________________ >> Policies and (un)subscribe information available here: >> http://wiki.secondlife.com/wiki/OpenSource-Dev >> Please read the policies before posting to keep unmoderated posting >> privileges >> > > > > -- > “Lanie, I’m going to print more printers. Lots more printers. One for > everyone. That’s worth going to jail for. That’s worth anything.” - > Printcrime by Cory Doctrow > > Please avoid sending me Word or PowerPoint attachments. > See http://www.gnu.org/philosophy/no-word-attachments.html > _______________________________________________ > Policies and (un)subscribe information available here: > http://wiki.secondlife.com/wiki/OpenSource-Dev > Please read the policies before posting to keep unmoderated posting privileges _______________________________________________ Policies and (un)subscribe information available here: http://wiki.secondlife.com/wiki/OpenSource-Dev Please read the policies before posting to keep unmoderated posting privileges