Folks,

 Well I recently retired and was asked to return all training materials to my 
employer. I refused as the contracts included in the front of the books clearly 
stated that these were licenced to me personally not to whoever paid for the 
course, and were not to be passed to any one else, including my employer. I 
wonder if they would have sent me if they known? If the materials are meant to 
be so licenced I would expect them to include a specific reference to the 
licence some where at the front. In the case of AIX as folks are still running 
AIX courses I suspect that releasing them to the public may not be legal...

Dave

> -----Original Message-----
> From: cctalk [mailto:cctalk-boun...@classiccmp.org] On Behalf Of Sam
> O'nella via cctalk
> Sent: 13 March 2017 04:54
> To: Electronics Plus <sa...@elecplus.com>; General Discussion: On-Topic and
> Off-Topic Posts <cctalk@classiccmp.org>
> Subject: RE: AIX documentation
> 
> As others said, we're not lawyers so ymmv but I would take it as the same as
> selling a used cd, dvd, software or books. The usual law is we can't copy it. 
> So
> scanning it, if that company or company's intellectual property is still in
> existence they might care. But selling originals is usually ok unless specific
> wording against it, although that's also probably the original owner in 
> contract
> not yourself. Ironically I was *just* having a similar thought and self
> conversation with some training materials I just purchased from a used book
> store.
> All the best,
> - John
> -------- Original message --------From: Electronics Plus via cctalk
> <cctalk@classiccmp.org> Date: 3/12/17  5:15 PM  (GMT-06:00) To: "'General
> Discussion: On-Topic and Off-Topic Posts'" <cctalk@classiccmp.org> Subject:
> AIX documentation I have a number of binders that have pretty thorough
> AIX documentation, but the trouble is, there are from security classes that
> were taught by private companies. Am I legally allowed to resell these?
> 


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