Let me get this straight,

I store all of my OpenOffice.org materials, downloaded user guides and whatnot 
on an encrypted hard drive, and that places me in violation of the CC-BY?

That's ridiculous.  

Since none of the materials we are talking about, made available under CC-BY, 
are considered secret, why do we care that a secure system might include such 
materials in its storage.  Those are black holes and we will not know nor ever 
care that they happen to have thrown digital copies of OpenOffice.org User 
Guides in there along with all of the proprietary digital materials for 
operation and support for those highly-secured systems (if they actually do 
comingle non-secret materials that way).

There is no problem.  This is an ordinary situation.  The only problem is 
wanting such materials contributed to the Apache OpenOffice.org project under 
ALv2 and being unwilling to tolerate that some good material is not so 
available and will probably continue to not be so available no matter what our 
desires are in the matter.  

When push comes to shove (and we are not anywhere close to that), we can work 
around the same way we work around in order to IP sanitize the code base.  
There's no reason to make this an urgent situation and front-load an 
already-struggling podling.

 - Dennis

-----Original Message-----
From: [email protected] [mailto:[email protected]] On Behalf Of Rob Weir
Sent: Tuesday, August 30, 2011 09:53
To: [email protected]
Subject: Re: An example of the license problems we're going to face

On Tue, Aug 30, 2011 at 12:41 PM, Simon Phipps <[email protected]> wrote:
> On Tue, Aug 30, 2011 at 5:39 PM, Rob Weir <[email protected]> wrote:
>
>> On Tue, Aug 30, 2011 at 12:34 PM, Simon Phipps <[email protected]> wrote:
>> > On Tue, Aug 30, 2011 at 5:31 PM, Rob Weir <[email protected]> wrote:
>> >
>> >> Suppose someone wants to take parts of
>> >> the AOOo code, along with the associated documentation, and create an
>> >> iPhone app from it.  The ALv2 would permit them to do this with the
>> >> source code, but CC-BY 3.0 would not allow the same for the
>> >> documentation.  Similarly, one could not take the documentation, add
>> >> value to with additional content, and then sell it for $0.99 for the
>> >> Amazon Kindle.
>> >>
>> >
>> > Please can you explain why you believe this to be so?
>> >
>>
>> "You may not impose any effective technological measures on the Work
>> that restrict the ability of a recipient of the Work from You to
>> exercise the rights granted to that recipient under the terms of the
>> License."
>>
>> IANAL, but that was the clause that got attention on legal-discuss
>> when reviewing CC-BY 3.0.
>>
>>
> Ah, so Kindle-specific. Thanks.
>

Not really.  That is the consumer side of it, certainly.   But the
application of "sealed storage' goes far beyond consumer applications.
 For high security applications, for example, you might want to
restrict access to applications and associated static data files.
Interestingly today there are reports of the Australian Department of
Defense doing a trial of OpenOffice.org  They would probably disagree
with any assertion that only book publishers have an interest in such
"technological measures".


> S.
>

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