> If this was true, then distributing any content that did not include a 
license would be illegal.

Haven't we already covered the implication of using a feed in the first place? 
The purpose of a feed is to distribute content off the server of the originator.

What I have stated, is that in a feed with a license - there is no such 
implication. I have been explicit, deliberate and provided terms/conditions. 
Breach those, and all rights are revoked immediately.

> The only thing that is lost when a license is stripped is that a 
downstream user can't claim permission for uses not otherwise permitted 
by copyright

Which means the Hub stripping the license committed an illegal act by 
distributing it downstream. Does my copyright rights allow distribution by 
default? No, it doesn't.

> When you put "license" text content, you can be as explicit as you want
to be. However, that doesn't mean that anything you claim, write, etc.
has any legal weight.

I am the copyright holder. Sorry, but if I license my content - that does have 
legal weight. I am the only individual capable of granting rights to others. 
And for once in the digital age, that's covered by both legislation and case 
law (at least here). A license is a legally binding agreement.

> What has weight is what the legislature says has
weight and there is no legislature that has ever defined any format or
protocol for specifying license rights in digital content.

I can't judge to your standard because I'm from Ireland. From a common sense 
perspective though, what needs defining? The license title and URI is added to 
a feed itself - in plain text.

> In the case of syndication feeds, HTML pages, etc. there is generally an 
> assumption that facilitative copying, facilitative transformations, 
etc. are permitted.

You cannot apply an assumption when the copy holder has explicitly specified 
precise and legally binding terms and conditions. Sorry, but doing so is 
illegal. Assumptions only apply in the absence of the publisher's intent. My 
own blog feed makes my intent, to the contrary, very clear and obvious.


 Pádraic Brady

http://blog.astrumfutura.com
http://www.survivethedeepend.com
OpenID Europe Foundation Irish Representative





________________________________
From: Bob Wyman <[email protected]>
To: [email protected]
Sent: Mon, December 28, 2009 9:19:05 PM
Subject: Re: [pubsubhubbub] Normalizing Fat Pings to Atom

On Mon, Dec 28, 2009 at 3:45 PM, Pádraic Brady <[email protected]> wrote:
> If a Hub strips that license, ...
> Distributing
downstream at that point is illegal.
If this was true, then distributing any content that did not include a license 
would be illegal. But, that is clearly not the case. The only thing that is 
lost when a license is stripped is that a downstream user can't claim 
permission for uses not otherwise permitted by copyright.

No statement that you put in your content can increase the rights granted to 
you by copyright law. The most you can do by putting statements in your content 
is to waive rights granted to you or grant those rights to others. How can the 
water rise above its source?

When you put "license" text content, you can be as explicit as you want
to be. However, that doesn't mean that anything you claim, write, etc.
has any legal weight. What has weight is what the legislature says has
weight and there is no legislature that has ever defined any format or
protocol for specifying license rights in digital content. Because this
is an issue of the law, not technology, no "standard" defined by any 
non-legislative body
can serve to define such formats. Only legislatures, or other law
makers (Kings, dictators, rulers, etc.), define the law. Standards are not laws 
and have no legal weight unless explicitly incorporated into the law.

> If I make a feed available, and it specifies
> a license, I just explicitly gave rights away
You can only give rights away if, in fact, some law gave you those rights in 
the first place. In the case of syndication feeds, HTML pages, etc. there is 
generally an assumption that facilitative copying, facilitative 
transformations, etc. are permitted and that permitting this limited form of 
copying and transformation does not extend as far as permitting derivative 
works, etc. 

bob wyman


On Mon, Dec 28, 2009 at 3:45 PM, Pádraic Brady <[email protected]> wrote:

> Actually, "license/copyright" should be the least controversial stuff to
> remove during a reformatting operation.
>
>How so? If I make a feed available, and it specifies a license, I just 
>explicitly gave rights away - I'm not in any default/assumed halfway house. I 
>just informed everyone how to distribute, under what circumstances to 
>distribute, and when you must stop distributing (etc). If a Hub strips that 
>license, they remove the rights it granted, and some of those rights include 
>copying/distributing. Distributing downstream at that point is illegal. That's 
>the benefit of being deliberate in adding a license to a feed in the first 
>place. It's also why it is controversial - we can't always rely on automated 
>systems to make the right choice. Indeed, how many automated systems actually 
>do? In the imperfect system we live with, we're lucky to even see a URI back 
>to the original source sometimes ;).
>
>
>Paddy
>
>Pádraic Brady
>
>http://blog.astrumfutura.com
>http://www.survivethedeepend.com
>OpenID Europe Foundation Irish Representative
>
>
>
>
>
>
________________________________
 From: Bob Wyman <[email protected]>
>To: [email protected]
>Sent: Mon, December 28, 2009 8:14:30 PM
>
>Subject: Re: [pubsubhubbub] Normalizing Fat Pings to Atom
>
>
>>On Mon, Dec 28, 2009 at 2:48 PM, Pádraic Brady <[email protected]> 
>>wrote:
>> In my mind, any normalisation which removes a
>>> license/copyright would be in breach by default
>>> - no question in my mind.
>
>Actually, "license/copyright" should be the least controversial stuff to 
>remove during a reformatting operation. The reason is that removing such data 
>can do no harm to the publisher.
>>
>Copyright law defines the maximum level of control that a creator or publisher 
>has over content unless there are explicit contracts in force. Nothing that a 
>publisher can put into their content can, in any way, restrict third-party use 
>of the content any more than copyright already does by default. Thus, the 
>worst you can do by removing any sort of licensing language from a feed is to 
>cause the feed to be controlled by raw copyright.
>
>You say: "many licenses require attribution". I think you may be referring 
>here to things like Creative Commons licenses... However, no Creative Commons 
>license actually *restricts* the use of content. What Creative Commons does is 
>grant rights that would normally not be granted by copyright. Thus, an 
>"attribution required" license really says: "You can copy this content, even 
>if copyright law would normally prevent such copying, as long as you provide 
>attribution." Creative Commons doesn't "prohibit" copying without attribution, 
>copyright does that. What Creative Commons does is "permit" copying if there 
>is attribution. Removing the Creative Commons license actually imposes 
>*greater* restrictions on the use of the data -- by preventing all 
>non-facilitative copying instead of permitting some such uses. 
>>
>The same is true of things like "Non-Commercial Use Only" Creative Commons 
>licenses. These things don't actually forbid commercial use, they actually 
>just say that non-commercial use is permitted while commercial use remains 
>prohibited if copyright would prohibit such copying.
>
>bob wyman
>
>
>On Mon, Dec 28, 2009 at 2:48 PM, Pádraic Brady <[email protected]> wrote:
>
>It's always been a gray area. For myself, I think the acid test is whether the 
>information presented by the format is altered (the format itself shouldn't 
>matter). So long as the modifications present the information accurately, 
>preserve any required copyright/licensing, and only reduce (not add) 
>information (as with normalisation a lot), it should be fine. Adding 
>information is often hard if it can be viewed downstream as the work of the 
>original source. The licensing is the sticky bit - many licenses require 
>attribution to be made clear when copying/distributing. In my mind, any 
>normalisation which removes a license/copyright would be in breach by default 
>- no question in my mind. It's ethically unsound to strip such information in 
>my opinion.
>>>>
>>
>>Paddy
>>
>> Pádraic Brady
>>
>>http://blog.astrumfutura.com
>>http://www.survivethedeepend.com
>>OpenID Europe Foundation Irish Representative
>>
>>
>>
>>
>>
>>
________________________________
 >>From: Matthew Terenzio <[email protected]>
>>To: [email protected]
>>Sent: Mon, December 28, 2009 7:16:46 PM
>>
>>Subject: Re: [pubsubhubbub] Normalizing Fat Pings to Atom
>>
>>>>
>>
>>>>BTW, I'm not saying it's wrong to do. That is between a service and it's 
>>>>customers.  Just that it shouldn't be part of a spec because of the 
>>>>considerations mentioned.
>>
>>
>>On Mon, Dec 28, 2009 at 2:13 PM, Matthew Terenzio <[email protected]> wrote:
>>
>>Does a hub have a right (legal or ethical) to modify a feed in any way before 
>>delivery? 
>>>
>>>Yes, I choose the hub, but the spec allows for federation. Could three hubs 
>>>down the chain take my feed and make modifications to it that may not be to 
>>>my liking?
>>>
>>>I hope not. Maybe Corp A doesn't want their feed being converted to Corp B's 
>>>protocol.
>>>
>>>
>>>
>>
>

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