↪ 2015-09-09 Wed 12:44, Alessandro Rubini <[email protected]>: > > It would of course also be ok to upload photos of monuments if the > > copyright has expired, i.e. 70 years after the creator has died. > > True, and let me note how this is an incentive to kill architects and > artists (and authors in general). > > A few months ago my local newspaper celebrated the liberation of "The > Little Prince" (Le Petit Prince), organizing a contest for pupils, > like "redraw and rewrite your own little prince". The message to me > was "we are all happy the author was shot 70 years ago", but very few > noted that. > > There's something awfully wrong in our rule-set. > > /alessandro
The most absurd part of this, is that in France, this is still not in the public domain because Antoine de Saint-Exupéry was declared “dead for France” and thus the duration of the author’s rights on his works last longer. -- Hugo Roy – Free Software Foundation Europe https://fsfe.org/about/roy Please use cryptography for email: see https://emailselfdefense.fsf.org/en/ Merci d’utiliser la cryptographie pour l’email : voir https://emailselfdefense.fsf.org/fr/
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