Hi!

On Thu, Sep 24, 2009 at 21:27, Tim Cook <timothywayne.cook at gmail.com> wrote:
>... our own specifications are locked up in these two
> formats. ?We cannot manipulate them into any kind of help files in order
> to integrate them into an application and god forbid we think about
> machine translation into other languages.

This discussion regards the technical hurdles of extracting
specification content in order to include it in help files etc, but
what about the legal copyright related possibilities for that?
According to the copyright notice of the openEHR specifications
(included below) it is not clear to me that you can take specification
content and include it in programs (or documents) that might get used
commercially or for non-educational purposes. Isn't this an even more
urgent issue to solve than the technical extraction?

In a previous license discussion I suggested the much more commonly
understood and more open CC-BY licence
(http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/3.0/) to be used for the
specification documents, but I believe the discussion then slipped
over to just licensing for archetypes. Can we solve this while we are
at it?

>From the documentation...
"? Copyright openEHR Foundation 2001 - 2008
All Rights Reserved
1. This document is protected by copyright and/or database right throughout the
world and is owned by the openEHR Foundation.
2. You may read and print the document for private, non-commercial use.
3. You may use this document (in whole or in part) for the purposes of making
presentations and education, so long as such purposes are non-commercial and
are designed to comment on, further the goals of, or inform third parties
about, openEHR.
4. You must not alter, modify, add to or delete anything from the document you
use (except as is permitted in paragraphs 2 and 3 above).
5. You shall, in any use of this document, include an acknowledgement
in the form:
?? Copyright openEHR Foundation 2001-2008. All rights reserved. www.openEHR.org?
6. This document is being provided as a service to the academic community and on
a non-commercial basis. Accordingly, to the fullest extent permitted under
applicable law, the openEHR Foundation accepts no liability and offers no
warranties in relation to the materials and documentation and their content.
7. If you wish to commercialise, license, sell, distribute, use or
otherwise copy
the materials and documents on this site other than as provided for in
paragraphs 1 to 6 above, you must comply with the terms and conditions of the
openEHR Free Commercial Use Licence, or enter into a separate written agreement
with openEHR Foundation covering such activities. The terms and conditions of
the openEHR Free Commercial Use Licence can be found at
http://www.openehr.org/free_commercial_use.htm";

...by the way there is currently nothing at
http://www.openehr.org/free_commercial_use.htm

Best regards,
Erik Sundvall
http://www.imt.liu.se/~erisu/
erik.sundvall at liu.se (previously erisu at imt.liu.se)
Tel: +46-13-227579 (soon changing to +46-13-286733)


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