Scripsit John Goerzen <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> > If it constitutes distribution, it is fundamentally a different act than > displaying a user interface, and thus 2c does not apply to the mere display > since there is no display going on.
Yet in that case there would be grounds for claiming that the distributed program is *executed* when the user's browser interprets the embedded client-side scripts, and that it *then* displays things in the browser windows. I don't think it would be entirely out of the 2(c) context to require the program to display a copyright notice in that case. (Which is not to say that I like such a requirement at all. Just consider me the devil's advocate for a moment, please). -- Henning Makholm "Y'know, I don't want to seem like one of those hackneyed Jews that you see in heartwarming movies. But at times like this, all I can say is 'Oy, gevalt!'"