Hans Åberg <haber...@telia.com> writes:

>> On 6 Sep 2018, at 03:07, Simon Albrecht <simon.albre...@mail.de> wrote:
>> 
>> of course you are right, I misrepresented that and went too far –
>> sorry.  A reengraving is no different from a photocopy in that you
>> cannot give it to anybody or use it for performing, regardless
>> whether parts of that may not be enforcible. But you can do whatever
>> you want in your house, so to speak.
>
> In fact, a few years ago, a guy engraved the very same piece and put
> it up on the net, and got a notice from the copyright holder asking
> merely to take it down.

That's the nice way of dealing with that situation.  A Cease&Desist
notice with lawyer fees attached is the neutral way.  Suing for
statutory and/or estimated damages (based on download numbers, possibly
estimated) is the non-nice way.

It depends on jurisdictions, public relations, the size and workload of
the respective legal department which of those options (and/or others)
will be chosen.  Also on whether the legal department is budgeted in a
manner where it is supposed to contribute to its salaries.

In short: it's not a good plan to rely on any particular kind of
response.

-- 
David Kastrup

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