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Steve Jessop
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Being generous to the person in question, they think that deleting the question restricts or interferes with the license under which people have already received it.

I am not a lawyer either, but it seems unlikely to me that this belief is sustained in law. There are a couple of easy mistakes that would lead to this conclusion:

  • that SO in some way restricts you from distributing any copies you may have made of the deleted question. I don't think it does, although it looks as if it does because SO's definition of "attribution" is to link to the question. This is not possible if it has been deleted, but I'm pretty sure that the resolution to that quandary is that SO doesn't get the attribution in the form it prefers, not that since it's impossible to attribute to SO's satisfaction you cannot redistribute. SO (as a re-distributer of content under the license) doesn't actually have the right to arbitrarily define what constitutes attribution, so I suspect that whatever definition it makes can only be considered the preferred attribution. Of course since CC licenses aren't widely tested in court, in some sense this person can come and have a go if they think they have a case.
  • that SO's practical interference with your ability to download the question from them again, is in some way a legal restriction on your right to redistribute. I think it pretty clearly isn't, but I see how someone might misinterpret a right to do something, as a right to be helped to do something. The license gives you the right to redistribute a copy you took, but it doesn't give you the right to get another copy from SO.

Being less generous to the person, they are imagining properties of the license that they would like but which in fact do not exist: specifically a responsibility to maintain these "very basic principles of free exchange of ideas".

Being ungenerous to the person, they're making stuff up because they're angry.

The appropriate response depends what you can assume about the person who wrote it. Treating it as a genuine legal misunderstanding, it would make sense to make a reasoned counter-claim except that it's off-topic for SO comments, issues about licensing belong here on meta. So the person should be directed here, probably combined with deletion. Treating it as spurious invention it would make sense to delete it without remark :-)

Being generous to the person in question, they think that deleting the question restricts or interferes with the license under which people have already received it.

I am not a lawyer either, but it seems unlikely to me that this belief is sustained in law. There are a couple of easy mistakes that would lead to this conclusion:

  • that SO in some way restricts you from distributing any copies you may have made of the deleted question. I don't think it does, although it looks as if it does because SO's definition of "attribution" is to link to the question. This is not possible if it has been deleted, but I'm pretty sure that the resolution to that quandary is that SO doesn't get the attribution in the form it prefers, not that since it's impossible to attribute to SO's satisfaction you cannot redistribute. SO (as a re-distributer of content under the license) doesn't actually have the right to arbitrarily define what constitutes attribution, so I suspect that whatever definition it makes can only be considered the preferred attribution. Of course since CC licenses aren't widely tested in court, in some sense this person can come and have a go if they think they have a case.
  • that SO's practical interference with your ability to download the question from them again, is in some way a legal restriction on your right to redistribute. I think it pretty clearly isn't. The license gives you the right to redistribute a copy you took, but it doesn't give you the right to get another copy from SO.

Being less generous to the person, they are imagining properties of the license that they would like but which in fact do not exist: specifically a responsibility to maintain these "very basic principles of free exchange of ideas".

Being ungenerous to the person, they're making stuff up because they're angry.

Being generous to the person in question, they think that deleting the question restricts or interferes with the license under which people have already received it.

I am not a lawyer either, but it seems unlikely to me that this belief is sustained in law. There are a couple of easy mistakes that would lead to this conclusion:

  • that SO in some way restricts you from distributing any copies you may have made of the deleted question. I don't think it does, although it looks as if it does because SO's definition of "attribution" is to link to the question. This is not possible if it has been deleted, but I'm pretty sure that the resolution to that quandary is that SO doesn't get the attribution in the form it prefers, not that since it's impossible to attribute to SO's satisfaction you cannot redistribute. SO (as a re-distributer of content under the license) doesn't actually have the right to arbitrarily define what constitutes attribution, so I suspect that whatever definition it makes can only be considered the preferred attribution. Of course since CC licenses aren't widely tested in court, in some sense this person can come and have a go if they think they have a case.
  • that SO's practical interference with your ability to download the question from them again, is in some way a legal restriction on your right to redistribute. I think it pretty clearly isn't, but I see how someone might misinterpret a right to do something, as a right to be helped to do something. The license gives you the right to redistribute a copy you took, but it doesn't give you the right to get another copy from SO.

Being less generous to the person, they are imagining properties of the license that they would like but which in fact do not exist: specifically a responsibility to maintain these "very basic principles of free exchange of ideas".

Being ungenerous to the person, they're making stuff up because they're angry.

The appropriate response depends what you can assume about the person who wrote it. Treating it as a genuine legal misunderstanding, it would make sense to make a reasoned counter-claim except that it's off-topic for SO comments, issues about licensing belong here on meta. So the person should be directed here, probably combined with deletion. Treating it as spurious invention it would make sense to delete it without remark :-)

Source Link
Steve Jessop
  • 278.8k
  • 17
  • 14

Being generous to the person in question, they think that deleting the question restricts or interferes with the license under which people have already received it.

I am not a lawyer either, but it seems unlikely to me that this belief is sustained in law. There are a couple of easy mistakes that would lead to this conclusion:

  • that SO in some way restricts you from distributing any copies you may have made of the deleted question. I don't think it does, although it looks as if it does because SO's definition of "attribution" is to link to the question. This is not possible if it has been deleted, but I'm pretty sure that the resolution to that quandary is that SO doesn't get the attribution in the form it prefers, not that since it's impossible to attribute to SO's satisfaction you cannot redistribute. SO (as a re-distributer of content under the license) doesn't actually have the right to arbitrarily define what constitutes attribution, so I suspect that whatever definition it makes can only be considered the preferred attribution. Of course since CC licenses aren't widely tested in court, in some sense this person can come and have a go if they think they have a case.
  • that SO's practical interference with your ability to download the question from them again, is in some way a legal restriction on your right to redistribute. I think it pretty clearly isn't. The license gives you the right to redistribute a copy you took, but it doesn't give you the right to get another copy from SO.

Being less generous to the person, they are imagining properties of the license that they would like but which in fact do not exist: specifically a responsibility to maintain these "very basic principles of free exchange of ideas".

Being ungenerous to the person, they're making stuff up because they're angry.