A better comparison:
I make a brand new kind of fishing lure, but have no intention of ever marketing it. I just enjoy making fishing lures. One day, a guy comes along to the lake I flyfish at, and sees my revolutionary new lure design. he offers to buy, or at least asks me for one of my special lures. I have plenty of them, because I make them. I'm a nice fellow, so I grant the request, and the guy takes one of my lures.
I expect that he simply intends to use the lure. I am perfectly fine with that use, which is why I gave him the lure.
That is not what this guy does. instead, he takes the lure home and carefully dissects the lure, seeing exactly how it works. He then writes a patent document on said revolutionary lure design, files it, and because I did not file one first, he gets the legal power and prestige of inventing that design, even though he is a charlatan. He sells the shit out of his amazing patented lures, that are flagrant copies of my design. moreover, I can now no longer produce and distrubute my lures, because doing so violates his "rights."
That's basically analogous to basically every paid mod that was in the store. The big mods in the community are cathedral style architecture. That means they are built on the combined knowledge base and skill set of many hundreds of contributors not on the main creditor list. They use coding techniques pioneered and shared to the community. They use rigging and weighted mesh techniques and tool chains for file export that were pioneered and shared by the community. They then add their own contribution (which without argument, may be substantive and nontrivial!) and slap their name on, and demand full ownership rights.
See the problem? When there is no profit motive to try to own other people's work, collaboration enables great things. Once you introduce that, it rips the community apart, because toolset makers have to protect their contribution from downstream users claiming their work, even if they dont purposefully comprehend that this is what they are in fact doing. See the previous instance of a mod being taken down because of an animation package inclusion that was pretty important to the polished feel of the mod, being the property of another modder, who forbade paid mod use.
I could forbid all font mods and tools from being paid in nature, by asserting my property rights to the whitepaper and progenitor font toolset from which basically all morrowind, oblivion, and skyrim font editing tools descend. All subsequent tools are derivative works of my original work. I can seriously shit in some cheerios. I dont believe that is an appropriate action, and would never do so, but I could well and truly do so, since i can establish the timeline of creation and innovation, which I did earlier in this thread.
Not everyone is as nice about that kind of thing as I am. Thats why that mod got pulled/neutered.
Many tools, guides, and mod packages were created under the implied social contract that all mods created with those techniques, tools, and progenitor mod packages would likewise be free for community use and innovation. That makes Estoppel especially applicable. Paid mod making represents a sudden change in the use of that property that these progenitors may not wish to permit, and sales can be legally stopped and distribution rights killed by prompt enforcement after the change. A modder may have created a magnum opus, be be legally barred from even distributing it, because of the enforcement of rights by works it is built on-- let alone selling his work.
Adding this kind of thing to a community like this one, however well intentioned they claim to have been, is just plain insane, and patently stupid. I wont beat around the bush on that. It is mired in the intractable quagmire of people who's works are inseparably joined to other people's works, with all the contributors now pulling in different directions instead of pulling as one.
all because some people thought it would be a good idea, without actually contempating what the consequences and realities of that would be.
This isnt just a bad idea now. It will be a bad idea tomorrrow, and a bad idea the next day, and the day after that.
I am not telling you to not do this, I am begging you not to do this, and struggling to grasp why you want to do this.
It's not wrong to want something. It's wrong to do something that affects many other people out of selfish reasons, which is what direct monetization does, and always will do, given THIS mod community, and the way it is structured.
It is doubly wrong to assert blithely that people who want you to stop are the ones being greedy.
Think about what it really is that you are wanting here. Be honest about it, and stop trying to rationalize it in rosy ideal conditions, because the real world is not ideal. It's ugly and full of conflcts of interest and politics, and pure premium bullshit all around. I beg of you. please dont ever consider that this kind of thing will ever be beneficial for the community.
Yes, you can prove that more financials can be extracted, but then again strip mining is very profitable too. that does not make it ethically acceptable as a solution when you consider the consequences.
The legal problems, the logistical problems caused by the legal problems, the political problems, the breakdown of collaborative power that can be leveraged from the political problems, and the resulting hatreds, feuding, biggotry and downright unpleasantness that would result are all just horribly toxic waste products of this idea in general. Donations allow modders to at least get SOME financial remuneration without causing the apochalypse. Yes, it isnt as financially effective-- but its far less ecologically destructive than the financially attractive option is.
Is the donation system perfect? o hell no. Is it better than getting nothing? arguably yes. Is it able to produce some limited currency stream without dumping poison down the well? yes.
Direct pay poisons the ground, but is very profitable. If all you care about is the profit, then it is the clear winner. If you care at all about the community, and not just your ability to exploit it for profit, then you see it for the ecologically destructive menace that it actually is.
so please, think about the consequences of direct marketing in cathedral style communities, and stop thinking about how much more money you could be making if you salted the ground and stripmined the community.