Licensing and mod portal
Posted: Sat Sep 07, 2019 10:53 pm
I am curious on how licensing and the mod portal works.
The mod showcased in Friday Facts #311: Industrial Revolution by Deadlock989 has a licence that specifies that commercial use is not permitted and:
"This INCLUDES commercial/monetised social media activities such as taking donations from YouTube or Twitch streaming, etc." Edit: (*The mod author changed the LICENSE.txt after the discussion took place, so the quoted sentence is no longer in there.*)
This is very restrictive to content creators
To my recollection there is no warning about licences when entering the mod portal.
The mods just install. So having restrictions on the mods that are more severe than on the game itself is something that likely very few people would know about.
Are we expected to install a mod through the game, exit or alt tab, browse the mod folder for a licence document, read it, look up on the internet what the different licenses mean (which includes reading a lot of language that are difficult to interpret for people who aren't experienced with licences) and then modify mod selections to make a series with on YouTube or stream?
What about updates to mods? - Can licenses be changed when mods are updated? Because that will be very difficult to keep track of.
There was a discussion about this earlier (in KatherineOfSky's discord channel), which made a lot of interesting points and questions about this licence.
Are people who haven't monetized their YouTube channel allowed to use the mod pack in videos they upload?
Are you allowed to have a monetized channel, as long as you don't receive donations? (because it's specified)
Can mod creators put as many restrictions as they want? Like not being allowed to share videos or stream at all?
And in the extreme: not be allowed to even play it without consent from the creator?
Someone asked out of curiosity: And Bilka from the Factorio developer team responded:
The post that Bilka is referring to with "Well, there was said that "we're fully behind it". Most likely nobody but me even read the license, so that is simply untrue" was:
What if you make content without knowing about this, what kinds of repercussions are there?
Are you breaking copyright law?
I asked Bilka from the Factorio developer team who was part of the discussion
I could have broken copyright laws easily because I had no idea mods weren't considered part of the game itself:
I thought that everything in the game - including browsing mods (from inside the game) would be considered part of the game itself
Breaking copyright laws from checking boxes inside the game itself is not intuitive to me.
I would love some clarification here, because if we are expected to go through the files on every mod we want to use for content creation, that is very important to know.
As a part of the Factorio community and as a content creator, I would also like to know Wube's stance on these kinds of restrictions because it opens up for mod creators being able to demand a cut from popular streamers or YouTube creators for instance.
Please note that this post is not about discussing the morals of anything - it's about clarification and a bit of PSA
The mod showcased in Friday Facts #311: Industrial Revolution by Deadlock989 has a licence that specifies that commercial use is not permitted and:
"This INCLUDES commercial/monetised social media activities such as taking donations from YouTube or Twitch streaming, etc." Edit: (*The mod author changed the LICENSE.txt after the discussion took place, so the quoted sentence is no longer in there.*)
This is very restrictive to content creators
To my recollection there is no warning about licences when entering the mod portal.
The mods just install. So having restrictions on the mods that are more severe than on the game itself is something that likely very few people would know about.
Are we expected to install a mod through the game, exit or alt tab, browse the mod folder for a licence document, read it, look up on the internet what the different licenses mean (which includes reading a lot of language that are difficult to interpret for people who aren't experienced with licences) and then modify mod selections to make a series with on YouTube or stream?
What about updates to mods? - Can licenses be changed when mods are updated? Because that will be very difficult to keep track of.
There was a discussion about this earlier (in KatherineOfSky's discord channel), which made a lot of interesting points and questions about this licence.
Are people who haven't monetized their YouTube channel allowed to use the mod pack in videos they upload?
Are you allowed to have a monetized channel, as long as you don't receive donations? (because it's specified)
Can mod creators put as many restrictions as they want? Like not being allowed to share videos or stream at all?
And in the extreme: not be allowed to even play it without consent from the creator?
Someone asked out of curiosity: And Bilka from the Factorio developer team responded:
The post that Bilka is referring to with "Well, there was said that "we're fully behind it". Most likely nobody but me even read the license, so that is simply untrue" was:
What if you make content without knowing about this, what kinds of repercussions are there?
Are you breaking copyright law?
I asked Bilka from the Factorio developer team who was part of the discussion
I could have broken copyright laws easily because I had no idea mods weren't considered part of the game itself:
I thought that everything in the game - including browsing mods (from inside the game) would be considered part of the game itself
Breaking copyright laws from checking boxes inside the game itself is not intuitive to me.
I would love some clarification here, because if we are expected to go through the files on every mod we want to use for content creation, that is very important to know.
As a part of the Factorio community and as a content creator, I would also like to know Wube's stance on these kinds of restrictions because it opens up for mod creators being able to demand a cut from popular streamers or YouTube creators for instance.
Please note that this post is not about discussing the morals of anything - it's about clarification and a bit of PSA