Axel Hecht a écrit :
> This largely depends on local law, I think.
>
> I'm not the authoritative source here, but a German citizen can't give 
> up copyright, unless she/he is doing work for hire. German law, AFAIK. 
> There are folks that interpret the "I assign my copyright to FSF" 
> statement as actually granting the FSF with a pretty wild license and 
> retaining your own copyright, I think.
>
> Anyway, what you can legally do with your copyright depends on what 
> law you're bound to. What you can enforce against someone else to do 
> with the stuff you created is probably bound to what law they're bound 
> to.
>
> Oh gosh, I'm not a lawyer, I'm just making up stuff here. Don't quote me.
>
> But I'd be surprised if "one entity is a legal entity, and, oh, it's 
> not-for-profit" had a big influence on copyright.
:)
I'm neither a lawyer, I was just asking if this was a way to solve this 
issue.
The "not-for-profit" wasn't the rationale (it is "Association loi 1901" 
in France), the question was about legal entity.

regards
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