On 2/10/2010 6:17 PM, Alexander Terekhov wrote:
One *SINGLE* (consisting of a separate unique whole) project is not a joint work although it produces a (single) (combined) "larger program"???
Correct. A joint work is created only when all of its authors agree and intend to do so. Otherwise, as each author makes revisions, he creates a derivative work (doing so without infringement only with permission of all the rights holders).
"If the program dynamically links plug-ins, and they make function calls to each other and share data structures, we believe they form a single program, which must be treated as an extension of both the main program and the plug-ins. " "But if the semantics of the communication are intimate enough, exchanging complex internal data structures, that too could be a basis to consider the two parts as combined into a larger program. " http://www.gnu.org/licenses/gpl-faq.html (The static linking "whole" aside for a moment, that is.) Please elaborate, Hyman.
As we know from both your opinions and the FSF's opinions, just because someone thinks something is true doesn't make it true. You both say things that you would like others to believe in order to get them to behave in certain ways. In any case, the actions of a single author cannot cause a work to become a joint work because a joint work can only be created through the intentions of all of its authors. _______________________________________________ gnu-misc-discuss mailing list gnu-misc-discuss@gnu.org http://lists.gnu.org/mailman/listinfo/gnu-misc-discuss