+1

From: M100 <[email protected]>  Mike Stein
Sent: Thursday, May 28, 2020 7:24 PM
To: [email protected]
Subject: Re: [M100] "No-VAN" obligation

 

Ditto

----- Original Message ----- 

From: Stephen Adolph <mailto:[email protected]>  

To: [email protected] <mailto:[email protected]>  

Sent: Thursday, May 28, 2020 7:07 PM

Subject: Re: [M100] "No-VAN" obligation

 

Thanks for providing that perspective Gary.  Seems reasonable.

 

 

On Thu, May 28, 2020 at 6:53 PM Gary Weber <[email protected] 
<mailto:[email protected]> > wrote:

To everyone with any concern about the M100SIG "NoVan" issue, I'm posting the 
following.   

 

After I was in direct communication with Wilson Van Alst back in the mid 2000s, 
I had replaced my downloadable copy of the M100SIG archive on Web8201 with the 
"NoVan" version that John graciously put together.  But after several 
conversations with various people on the subject many years later, including 
Rick Hanson before his passing on the subject, I made the decision to put the 
original archive back in place on Web8201, and I do intend to keep it that way. 
 

 

To Steve and some others, I know you feel differently about this, and I figure 
I should at least share with you my perspective.  There is one primary 
justification for my feelings on this subject:  All of the files from the 
M100SIG, including Wilson's contributions, were available publicly and free to 
download by anyone with an internet connection and without any account login 
for a number of years on CompuServe.com.  

 

You see, after the demise of the CompuServe paid service, they still allowed 
you to just visit compuserve.com <http://compuserve.com>  and visit the 
"archived" areas of all of the special interest group areas, including M100SIG, 
and download any of the files there, for free, without any login.  I did it 
myself in fact, many times.  There was no need to login with an account, and 
there was no required acceptance of a licensing agreement.  They were simply 
downloadable, for free, with no binding agreement and with no account.  

 

CompuServe was basically allowing the public full access to the ENTIRE special 
interest group archive.  I even brought that up with Wilson directly via an 
email exchange, but he declined to comment about this specific fact.  So any 
argument about "Commercial Software" is inconsequential at this point.

 

Since the files were available publicly on compuserve.com 
<http://compuserve.com> , they have every right to be available on any website, 
including archive.org <http://archive.org>  as well.  There is no legal issue 
with redistribution given they were available publicly on compuserve.com 
<http://compuserve.com>  before it eventually went away.  And on the topic of 
ethics, I would argue that the long-standing feud between Wilson & Rick was 
about the only thing that caused Wilson to put up a stink about the files to 
begin with, and any question of the ethics of redistribution of Wilson's stuff 
that was PUBLICLY AVAILABLE already is pretty baseless.

 

Gary Weber

Web 8201

 

 

On Tue, May 26, 2020 at 9:17 AM Brian K. White <[email protected] 
<mailto:[email protected]> > wrote:

On 5/26/20 12:10 PM, Stephen Adolph wrote:
> That is what I said, yes.  I simply and politely asked if you (supposing 
> it was you that posted it) could do something about it.
> 
> So I will ask again, politely.
> 
> Can and will anything be done about it?  As I have said, I think, if 
> possible, that the M100SIG should be removed from the internet archive.

I posted it.

It's the same as the copy Gary has been hosting on web8201 forever and 
still today.

I don't know if I can take it back down, but I assume I can, or that I 
can at least ask.

I am answering politely that I don't know yet whether I will try.

-- 
bkw




 

-- 

Gary Weber
[email protected] <mailto:[email protected]> 

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