Hyman Rosen <hyro...@mail.com> wrote: > Alan Mackenzie wrote: >> An example of a "mere aggregation" is two books bound together in a >> single spine. However, if two authors were to cooperate to produce a >> single book, this would not be a "mere aggretation" - it would be a >> tightly integrated whole - just like a single binary resulting from a >> compilation process.
> No. What's missing from the compilation case is the work of > authorship. Sorry, I can't parse that. Which work of authorship are you talking about? By "work" do you mean the process of working or an artifact? > Copyrighted works are created by human authors > doing creative work. Period. OK. > Any other way of creating a work that contains pieces of copyrighted > material results in just that - a pile of stuff with copyrighted > material in it. I think a "construction of stuff" is a better description than "pile of stuff", in the sense that if you take any bit away, the rest collapses into uselessness. The "any other way" might be a compiler/linker, or perhaps a printing press. Is that what you mean? > The work as a whole cannot be separately copyrighted. > The right to make copies of it is the intersection of the > right to make copies of the pieces. I'm not sure there are any "pieces" in any meaningful sense. If I write a book, which is then printed and bound by a publisher's machines, this is analogous to compiling and linking my program. The publisher doesn't have any copyright on the printed book, beyond what he's negotiated with the author. The book goes out of copyright N years (70 in the EU) after the _author's_ death, not the publisher's death. If I write foo.c and compile it to foo.o, I don't think there are pieces there. I then link it with a few other files and it becomes the executable foo. The only bits in there which aren't my copyright are analogues of the book's cover and printing. If I were to take some source code written by somebody who died in 1938 and compile it a working program, that program would be public domain, just like the source code, wouldn't it? Hey, didn't Ada Lovelace do some programming back in whenever it was? -- Alan Mackenzie (Nuremberg, Germany). _______________________________________________ gnu-misc-discuss mailing list gnu-misc-discuss@gnu.org http://lists.gnu.org/mailman/listinfo/gnu-misc-discuss