<HTML><head></head><body><div style="font-family: arial,sans-serif; font-size: 100%; color: rgb(0, 0, 0);"><pre class="ocsPlainText">Dear All,<br><br>We are changing Proteopedia's license for user-added content (to follow Wikipedia's lead), and to do that we need the approval of all Proteopedia users since they are in fact the owners of the user-added content on Proteopedia.<br><br>Our plan is to send the following email to all users, and have created a special webpage, linked to in the email, where users may submit their approval or rejection of re-licensing their content in agreement with the proposed change.<br><br>We are sending this to you first, members of the mailing list, in case you have any suggestions for fixing our wording or otherwise, since the next step is a large one: mailing all ~900 Proteopedia users.<br><br>Looking forward to your comments... (Also, please do submit your legitimate agreement/rejection of this proposed change via the linked webpage). Thank you -Eran<br><br><<<<br>Dear Proteopedia User,<br> <br>We would like to change Proteopedia's license, and to do so we need your approval since you have contributed to Proteopedia.<br> <br>In brief, Proteopedia would like to do what Wikipedia has done last year and switch to a more appropriate and open license for wikis.<br> <br>We need you to agree or disagree by visiting the following link, where you can also read more about the license change:<br> <br><a target="_blank" href="http://proteopedia.org/lic.html">http://proteopedia.org/lic.html</a> <br> <br>If after visiting and reading the above linked page you still have questions, please reply to this email with your questions.<br> <br>Thank you,<br> The Proteopedia Team<br>>>><br></pre></div></body></HTML>