I didn’t think it was possible, but I am now even more confused:
Paul Williams Responds to Copyleft Challenge
How is Creative Commons, the organization behind those easy-to-comprehend, web-friendly copyright licenses that are designed for use by non-lawyer humans (which arguably means people who can’t afford lawyers are now more empowered to put their work out there on exactly the terms that they want) “anti-copyright”? Don’t these licenses actually help people follow copyright by spelling out for them–not in complex legalese, but in clear pictograms attached to a special content search tool, for goodness sake–exactly what kinds of usages a creator says are permitted and which are not? In a growing low-budget/high-distro/pro-am world, this kind of development seems essential to maintaining order. When I see “All Rights Reserved” on a site that distributes content under a full range of copyright options, it doesn’t dilute it. If anything, it actually carries a great deal more weight to me because I know that the declared copyright wasn’t just the default position–it was proactively chosen to say, “Hey, I mean it, do not assume you can just put this on your blog/in your video. I said All Rights Reserved. No touchy!”
And while we’re on this, how is challenging someone to a debate the same as “silencing” that person? Wouldn’t that only work if they then refused to participate? Oh, wait…