Re: [License-discuss] Can copyrights be abandoned to the public domain?

2012-08-19 Thread Chris Travers
On Sat, Aug 18, 2012 at 9:41 AM, Lawrence Rosen lro...@rosenlaw.com wrote:
 Russ Nelson wrote:
 I hear a lot of whistling past the graveyard here. As people point out,
 it's never happened yet, and so it never will happen. Not a cause for
 concern; move along, nothing to see here.

 Russ, among the things I worry about in FOSS, moral rights are among the
 least worrisome. I'd almost welcome litigation about this issue so that we
 can expunge morality from software.

 If you want to worry about copyright law, consider 17 USC 203. [1] Tell me
 what you experience as you drive over that bridge

Fascinating law.  I will admit not to worrying about moral rights, or
this specific law.  For one I don't know that there is a lot of code
that wouldn't be turned over in the course of 35 years.  However it
does make you wonder once Linus passes on if his kids might decide to
pull this sort of thing and if so what the effect would be.

Best Wishes,
Chris Travers
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Re: [License-discuss] Can copyrights be abandoned to the public domain?

2012-08-18 Thread John Cowan
Russ Nelson scripsit:

 And yet we know that bridges collapse. Is it reasonable to take steps
 against bridges collapsing? We (mostly) don't build bridges out of
 wood (software from moral rights countries), but instead out of steel
 and concrete (countries where people cannot retroactively change the
 license on open source software).

Has anyone tried to revoke their (or their predecessor's) license
and lost in court?  I think not.  Indeed the Raymond/Olanich paper
at http://www.catb.org/esr/Licensing-HOWTO.html#changing discusses
changing the license on OSS, which of course involves revoking the
previous license.

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develop schemas is one of the simplehttp://www.ccil.org/~cowan
pleasures in life
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Re: [License-discuss] Can copyrights be abandoned to the public domain?

2012-08-18 Thread Chris Travers
On Fri, Aug 17, 2012 at 10:05 AM, Lawrence Rosen lro...@rosenlaw.comwrote:

 [This email best viewed in HTML format]

 ** **

 Hi Ben,

 ** **

 It would be difficult for Linus Torvalds to complain about porn when he
 intentionally released an operating system that is so ideally suited for
 the delivery of porn. It would be like Michelangelo complaining because
 derivatives of his statue of David revealed some private parts.



IANAL, but the intent of moral rights is to provide for the author's
reputation for his or her work and to ensure that the author maintains some
control over how the image of the work is maintained.  For a practical tool
this strikes me as somewhat of a mismatch just like protecting software as
expression is a bit of a mismatch.

For example, I don't know how Linus's moral rights would be interfered with
if nobody knew that a specific porn site was being hosted on a service
using the Linux kernel, although he'd seem to have a right to ask them to
display a powered by Linux logo or refuse to let them use such a logo.

Best Wishes,
Chris Travers
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Re: [License-discuss] Can copyrights be abandoned to the public domain?

2012-08-18 Thread Russ Nelson
John Cowan writes:
  Russ Nelson scripsit:
  
   And yet we know that bridges collapse. Is it reasonable to take steps
   against bridges collapsing? We (mostly) don't build bridges out of
   wood (software from moral rights countries), but instead out of steel
   and concrete (countries where people cannot retroactively change the
   license on open source software).
  
  Has anyone tried to revoke their (or their predecessor's) license
  and lost in court?

That's something different. I know that there's a theory which says
that copyright permissions, even if granted irrevokably, can be
withdrawn. That's not what I'm talking about here. I'm talking about
moral rights, where you can put something under an open source license
which (at least in our theory) allow changes without limit and yet the
law of the country where moral rights exist allows the copyright
holder to *prohibit* changes without limit.

I hear a lot of whistling past the graveyard here. As people point
out, it's never happened yet, and so it never will happen. Not a cause
for concern; move along, nothing to see here.

-- 
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Crynwr supports open source software
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Re: [License-discuss] Can copyrights be abandoned to the public domain?

2012-08-18 Thread Lawrence Rosen
Russ Nelson wrote:
 I hear a lot of whistling past the graveyard here. As people point out,
 it's never happened yet, and so it never will happen. Not a cause for 
 concern; move along, nothing to see here.

Russ, among the things I worry about in FOSS, moral rights are among the
least worrisome. I'd almost welcome litigation about this issue so that we
can expunge morality from software. 

If you want to worry about copyright law, consider 17 USC 203. [1] Tell me
what you experience as you drive over that bridge

/Larry

[1] http://www.law.cornell.edu/uscode/text/17/203 

Lawrence Rosen
Rosenlaw  Einschlag, a technology law firm (www.rosenlaw.com)
3001 King Ranch Rd., Ukiah, CA 95482
Office: 707-485-1242


-Original Message-
From: Russ Nelson [mailto:nel...@crynwr.com] 
Sent: Saturday, August 18, 2012 7:32 AM
To: license-discuss@opensource.org
Subject: Re: [License-discuss] Can copyrights be abandoned to the public
domain?

John Cowan writes:
  Russ Nelson scripsit:
 
   And yet we know that bridges collapse. Is it reasonable to take steps
  against bridges collapsing? We (mostly) don't build bridges out of   
wood (software from moral rights countries), but instead out of steel   
and concrete (countries where people cannot retroactively change the   
license on open source software).
 
  Has anyone tried to revoke their (or their predecessor's) license   and
lost in court?

That's something different. I know that there's a theory which says that
copyright permissions, even if granted irrevokably, can be withdrawn.
That's not what I'm talking about here. I'm talking about moral rights,
where you can put something under an open source license which (at least in
our theory) allow changes without limit and yet the law of the country where
moral rights exist allows the copyright holder to *prohibit* changes without
limit.

I hear a lot of whistling past the graveyard here. As people point out, it's
never happened yet, and so it never will happen. Not a cause for concern;
move along, nothing to see here.

-- 
--my blog is athttp://blog.russnelson.com
Crynwr supports open source software
521 Pleasant Valley Rd. | +1 315-600-8815
Potsdam, NY 13676-3213  | Sheepdog   
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Re: [License-discuss] Can copyrights be abandoned to the public domain?

2012-08-18 Thread Russ Nelson
Lawrence Rosen writes:
  If you want to worry about copyright law, consider 17 USC 203. [1] Tell me
  what you experience as you drive over that bridge

I'll tell you in 35 years.

-- 
--my blog is athttp://blog.russnelson.com
Crynwr supports open source software
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Re: [License-discuss] Can copyrights be abandoned to the public domain?

2012-08-17 Thread Lawrence Rosen
Russ Nelson asked:
 Larry, have you ever been driving over a bridge that collapsed?

Not that I can recall. :-) Out of fear of that very result, though, I
support increased infrastructure spending by our government.

But I don't stress out every time I drive over a bridge or when I use open
source software that is owned by an individual who wants to reserve her
moral rights. Indeed, I respect moral rights in the ways that I license and
use open source software and I advise respectful attribution whenever
appropriate. Does the protection of moral rights require anything onerous of
you?

Best,

/Larry

-Original Message-
From: Russ Nelson [mailto:nel...@crynwr.com] 
Sent: Thursday, August 16, 2012 10:43 PM
To: license-discuss@opensource.org
Subject: Re: [License-discuss] Can copyrights be abandoned to the public
domain?

Larry, have you ever been driving over a bridge that collapsed?
-russ

Lawrence Rosen writes:
  Russ, have you ever experienced that inferiority in actual open source
software? 
 
  /Larry (from my tablet and brief)
 
  Russ Nelson nel...@crynwr.com wrote:
 
  Oleksandr Gavenko writes:
  Moral Rights:
  
  Only some countries claim Moral Rights. And as you point out, this is  
very problemmatic for Open Source Software. We have traditionally held  
that a license is a license is a license, but it's clear that OSI  
Approved Open Source contributions from people who live in countries  
that claim Moral Rights is inferior to people who live in countries  
which don't.
  
  -- 
  --my blog is athttp://blog.russnelson.com
  Crynwr supports open source software   521 Pleasant Valley Rd. | +1
315-600-8815
  Potsdam, NY 13676-3213  | Sheepdog   
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Re: [License-discuss] Can copyrights be abandoned to the public domain?

2012-08-17 Thread Ben Tilly
On Fri, Aug 17, 2012 at 9:12 AM, Lawrence Rosen lro...@rosenlaw.com wrote:
 Russ Nelson asked:
 Larry, have you ever been driving over a bridge that collapsed?

 Not that I can recall. :-) Out of fear of that very result, though, I
 support increased infrastructure spending by our government.

 But I don't stress out every time I drive over a bridge or when I use open
 source software that is owned by an individual who wants to reserve her
 moral rights. Indeed, I respect moral rights in the ways that I license and
 use open source software and I advise respectful attribution whenever
 appropriate. Does the protection of moral rights require anything onerous of
 you?

Let's see.  Linus Torvalds is Finnish and began Linux in Finland.  As
Henrik pointed out, Finnish law has the concept of moral rights, and
one of those rights is the right of integrity, which can allow the
copyright holder to restrict the use of his copyrighted material in
ways that infringe on his honor.  In particular you can say that you
can't use that work for pornography.  Oleksandr pointed us to
http://www.wipo.int/treaties/en/ip/berne/trtdocs_wo001.html#P123_20726
which says that this moral right can be enforced even in countries
which do not have moral rights in their copyright law.

I am not a lawyer.  I know even less about international law.  My
knowledge of this topic is, in fact, pretty much half an hour with
Google following up references in this discussion.  But it looks to me
like Linus might have the ability to sue a US pornography company that
is using Linux to stream their porn based on his moral right rising
from Finnish copyright law.  If so, then that would run directly
counter to OSD #6.

I trust that Linus never would do so.  But if he and many other
European contributers to open source projects actually *could* do
that, that's not exactly a small detail.  (Particularly if you were
loving using open source to distribute your loving.)
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Re: [License-discuss] Can copyrights be abandoned to the public domain?

2012-08-17 Thread Lawrence Rosen
[This email best viewed in HTML format]

 

Hi Ben,

 

It would be difficult for Linus Torvalds to complain about porn when he
intentionally released an operating system that is so ideally suited for the
delivery of porn. It would be like Michelangelo complaining because
derivatives of his statue of David revealed some private parts.

 

/Larry

 

 

 

Description: http://www.richardclover.co.uk/images/MichelangeloDavid2.jpg

 

Source: http://www.richardclover.co.uk/node/39

 

 

-Original Message-
From: Ben Tilly [mailto:bti...@gmail.com] 
Sent: Friday, August 17, 2012 9:45 AM
To: lro...@rosenlaw.com; license-discuss@opensource.org
Subject: Re: [License-discuss] Can copyrights be abandoned to the public
domain?

 

On Fri, Aug 17, 2012 at 9:12 AM, Lawrence Rosen 
mailto:lro...@rosenlaw.com lro...@rosenlaw.com wrote:

 Russ Nelson asked:

 Larry, have you ever been driving over a bridge that collapsed?

 

 Not that I can recall. :-) Out of fear of that very result, though, I 

 support increased infrastructure spending by our government.

 

 But I don't stress out every time I drive over a bridge or when I use 

 open source software that is owned by an individual who wants to 

 reserve her moral rights. Indeed, I respect moral rights in the ways 

 that I license and use open source software and I advise respectful 

 attribution whenever appropriate. Does the protection of moral rights 

 require anything onerous of you?

 

Let's see.  Linus Torvalds is Finnish and began Linux in Finland.  As Henrik
pointed out, Finnish law has the concept of moral rights, and one of those
rights is the right of integrity, which can allow the copyright holder to
restrict the use of his copyrighted material in ways that infringe on his
honor.  In particular you can say that you can't use that work for
pornography.  Oleksandr pointed us to

 http://www.wipo.int/treaties/en/ip/berne/trtdocs_wo001.html#P123_20726
http://www.wipo.int/treaties/en/ip/berne/trtdocs_wo001.html#P123_20726

which says that this moral right can be enforced even in countries which do
not have moral rights in their copyright law.

 

I am not a lawyer.  I know even less about international law.  My knowledge
of this topic is, in fact, pretty much half an hour with Google following up
references in this discussion.  But it looks to me like Linus might have the
ability to sue a US pornography company that is using Linux to stream their
porn based on his moral right rising from Finnish copyright law.  If so,
then that would run directly counter to OSD #6.

 

I trust that Linus never would do so.  But if he and many other European
contributers to open source projects actually *could* do that, that's not
exactly a small detail.  (Particularly if you were loving using open source
to distribute your loving.)

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Re: [License-discuss] Can copyrights be abandoned to the public domain?

2012-08-17 Thread Russ Nelson
And yet we know that bridges collapse. Is it reasonable to take steps
against bridges collapsing? We (mostly) don't build bridges out of
wood (software from moral rights countries), but instead out of steel
and concrete (countries where people cannot retroactively change the
license on open source software).

Lawrence Rosen writes:
  Russ Nelson asked:
   Larry, have you ever been driving over a bridge that collapsed?
  
  Not that I can recall. :-) Out of fear of that very result, though, I
  support increased infrastructure spending by our government.
  
  But I don't stress out every time I drive over a bridge or when I use open
  source software that is owned by an individual who wants to reserve her
  moral rights. Indeed, I respect moral rights in the ways that I license and
  use open source software and I advise respectful attribution whenever
  appropriate. Does the protection of moral rights require anything onerous of
  you?
  
  Best,
  
  /Larry
  
  -Original Message-
  From: Russ Nelson [mailto:nel...@crynwr.com] 
  Sent: Thursday, August 16, 2012 10:43 PM
  To: license-discuss@opensource.org
  Subject: Re: [License-discuss] Can copyrights be abandoned to the public
  domain?
  
  Larry, have you ever been driving over a bridge that collapsed?
  -russ
  
  Lawrence Rosen writes:
Russ, have you ever experienced that inferiority in actual open source
  software? 
   
/Larry (from my tablet and brief)
   
Russ Nelson nel...@crynwr.com wrote:
   
Oleksandr Gavenko writes:
Moral Rights:

Only some countries claim Moral Rights. And as you point out, this is  
  very problemmatic for Open Source Software. We have traditionally held  
  that a license is a license is a license, but it's clear that OSI  
  Approved Open Source contributions from people who live in countries  
  that claim Moral Rights is inferior to people who live in countries  
  which don't.

-- 
--my blog is athttp://blog.russnelson.com
Crynwr supports open source software   521 Pleasant Valley Rd. | +1
  315-600-8815
Potsdam, NY 13676-3213  | Sheepdog   
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Re: [License-discuss] Can copyrights be abandoned to the public domain?

2012-08-17 Thread Ben Reser
On Fri, Aug 17, 2012 at 10:06 PM, Russ Nelson nel...@crynwr.com wrote:
 And yet we know that bridges collapse. Is it reasonable to take steps
 against bridges collapsing? We (mostly) don't build bridges out of
 wood (software from moral rights countries), but instead out of steel
 and concrete (countries where people cannot retroactively change the
 license on open source software).

Can you provide a list of software for which the license has been
invalidated or retroactively changed due to moral rights in any
country?

Please compare the list you come up with this for quantity of instances:
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_bridge_failures

Feel free to adjust the time frame on that list to those within the
time frame that software has existed.
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Re: [License-discuss] Can copyrights be abandoned to the public domain?

2012-08-16 Thread Henrik Ingo
On Fri, Aug 17, 2012 at 5:09 AM, Johnny Solbu joh...@solbu.net wrote:
 On Friday 17 August 2012 02:15, Russ Nelson wrote:
 but it's clear that OSI
 Approved Open Source contributions from people who live in countries
 that claim Moral Rights is inferior to people who live in countries
 which don't.

 Says who?
 And why?

I believe Finland has the concept of Moral Rights. As a IANAL summary,
the concept seems to be that even if I license or sell away the
commercial rights to my creation, I retain certain rights that I can
never give away, such as the right to be correctly cited as the author
of my works (which most FOSS licenses require anyway) and weird things
like the right to forbid the use of my work for pornography or other
things someone might find against my morality.

I have never heard anyone actually asserting this for software.
Further, some contracts I've signed, such as with Sun Microsystem,
included language to the effect that if there are parts of my
copyright that I cannot license away, I nevertheless irrevocably waive
my right to assert the moral rights in court, even if they are still
mine since they cannot be transferred/licensed. I have no idea if such
a waiver would mean anything in court since the whole point of the law
is quite the opposite.

henrik



-- 
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+358-40-8211286 skype: henrik.ingo irc: hingo
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Re: [License-discuss] Can copyrights be abandoned to the public domain?

2012-08-16 Thread Henrik Ingo
On Fri, Aug 17, 2012 at 7:51 AM, Henrik Ingo henrik.i...@avoinelama.fi wrote:
 On Fri, Aug 17, 2012 at 5:09 AM, Johnny Solbu joh...@solbu.net wrote:
 On Friday 17 August 2012 02:15, Russ Nelson wrote:
 but it's clear that OSI
 Approved Open Source contributions from people who live in countries
 that claim Moral Rights is inferior to people who live in countries
 which don't.

 Says who?
 And why?

 I believe Finland has the concept of Moral Rights. As a IANAL summary,
 the concept seems to be that even if I license or sell away the
 commercial rights to my creation, I retain certain rights that I can
 never give away, such as the right to be correctly cited as the author
 of my works (which most FOSS licenses require anyway) and weird things
 like the right to forbid the use of my work for pornography or other
 things someone might find against my morality.

 I have never heard anyone actually asserting this for software.
 Further, some contracts I've signed, such as with Sun Microsystem,
 included language to the effect that if there are parts of my
 copyright that I cannot license away, I nevertheless irrevocably waive
 my right to assert the moral rights in court, even if they are still
 mine since they cannot be transferred/licensed. I have no idea if such
 a waiver would mean anything in court since the whole point of the law
 is quite the opposite.

Oh, one thing I've always wondered though is, what would happen if for
instance the thousands of Nokia engineers who wrote code that went
into a mobile phone started actually requiring that Nokia would
acknowledge them by name as authors of the software. In open source
this commonly happens, but for closed source software products it
could be a lot of fun!

henrik




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Re: [License-discuss] Can copyrights be abandoned to the public domain?

2012-08-16 Thread Russ Nelson
Larry, have you ever been driving over a bridge that collapsed?
-russ

Lawrence Rosen writes:
  Russ, have you ever experienced that inferiority in actual open source 
  software? 
  
  /Larry (from my tablet and brief) 
  
  Russ Nelson nel...@crynwr.com wrote:
  
  Oleksandr Gavenko writes:
  Moral Rights:
  
  Only some countries claim Moral Rights. And as you point out, this is
  very problemmatic for Open Source Software. We have traditionally held
  that a license is a license is a license, but it's clear that OSI
  Approved Open Source contributions from people who live in countries
  that claim Moral Rights is inferior to people who live in countries
  which don't.
  
  -- 
  --my blog is athttp://blog.russnelson.com
  Crynwr supports open source software
  521 Pleasant Valley Rd. | +1 315-600-8815
  Potsdam, NY 13676-3213  | Sheepdog   
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Re: [License-discuss] Can copyrights be abandoned to the public domain?

2012-08-14 Thread Richard Fontana
On Tue, Aug 14, 2012 at 01:10:49PM -0400, Matthew Flaschen wrote:
 On 08/14/2012 11:52 AM, Tom Callaway wrote:
  Fedora used to spend a lot of time stressing out over this question, but
  recently, after counsel with Red Hat Legal, we concluded that if someone
  is explicitly and clearly abandoning their copyright on a work (as in
  CC-0, for example), treating that work in good faith as being in the
  public domain presented a very minimal amount of risk, especially since
  such a declaration, were it to go to trial, would likely limit the
  effectiveness of the copyright holder suing for infringement.
 
 CC0 (http://creativecommons.org/publicdomain/zero/1.0/legalcode)
 actually has an explicit license fallback in section 3, for cases where
 the PD dedication fails.  I would be interested to hear if the counsel's
 conclusion would hold without such fallback.

I believe I am the counsel Tom is referring to, though the Fedora
policy conclusion Tom refers to was prepared by Tom. Nevertheless I
would see it as Fedora adopting more or less the liberal and pragmatic
view I have had on this subject for a long time. Since most of the
self-described public domain code we encounter is not actually under
CC0 (most of it is legacy code, in rarer cases it's whole packages
like SQLite), CC0 is not directly relevant. However (modulo that or
patent language :) CC0 approximates nicely the way I think we should
analyze the more typical kinds of simple public domain dedications we
encounter in FOSS code.

  - RF

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Re: [License-discuss] Can copyrights be abandoned to the public domain?

2012-08-14 Thread Rick Moen
Quoting Ben Tilly (bti...@gmail.com):

 Based on http://www.linuxjournal.com/article/6225 and similar
 articles, I'd long believed that a declaration that you were
 abandoning copyright was a meaningless farce.
 
 Then by accident today I ran across http://cr.yp.to/publicdomain.html
 which claims the opposite, and cites actual court decisions as
 evidence.

His cites simply do not support his conclusion, by the way.  I dissect
that matter in passing on
http://linuxmafia.com/faq/Licensing_and_Law/public-domain.html .

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Re: [License-discuss] Can copyrights be abandoned to the public domain?

2012-08-14 Thread Richard Fontana
On Tue, Aug 14, 2012 at 11:22:05AM -0700, Rick Moen wrote:
 Quoting Richard Fontana (rfont...@redhat.com):
 
  I believe I am the counsel Tom is referring to, though the Fedora
  policy conclusion Tom refers to was prepared by Tom. Nevertheless I
  would see it as Fedora adopting more or less the liberal and pragmatic
  view I have had on this subject for a long time. 
 
 Seems reasonable to me.
 
 Correct me if I'm wrong (you're the professional), but I would imagine
 the relevant question for Red Hat, Inc. was not whether the erstwhile
 copyright owner actually succeeded in eradicating legal title to his/her
 copyright property (what is properly meant by 'public domain'), 

Yes. I agree with you that 'public domain' is a misnomer (but no more
than, say, the use of 'proprietary' to mean 'not free-as-in-freedom
software').

 but rather whether Red Hat, Inc. will be reasonably protected
 against infringement claims by either the owner's success or by
 estoppel.

Close enough, but I wouldn't want you to think Red Hat is just
concerned about Red Hat. We presume that software we consider open
source/free software allows certain permissions to everyone, not just
Red Hat, or we'd classify it otherwise.[1] The public domain-labeled
stuff we distribute in open source distribution contexts is code we
consider open source software (equivalent, essentially, to what is now
achievable through the quite detailed CC0). 

There are strange things I've seen in my time, like public domain for
noncommercial purposes. We would treat that as
nonfree/non-open-source.

  - RF

[1]Incidentally, I seem to remember encountering at least one case of
a license that said the equivalent of everyone *except* Red Hat is
free to use this code. Also not free software/open source. :)
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Re: [License-discuss] Can copyrights be abandoned to the public domain?

2012-08-14 Thread Rick Moen
Quoting Richard Fontana (rfont...@redhat.com):

 Yes. I agree with you that 'public domain' is a misnomer (but no more
 than, say, the use of 'proprietary' to mean 'not free-as-in-freedom
 software').

FWIW, I feel the latter has domain-specific meaning, here; i.e., that
'proprietary' functions legitimately as a term of art within discussion
of software.

Yes, that's not what 'proprietary' means elsewhere (i.e., the qualtiy of
being owned).  However, meanings have contexts.[1]

 Close enough, but I wouldn't want you to think Red Hat is just
 concerned about Red Hat.

Truth, and a point well worth making.

[1] I'd rather be pissed in London than in San Francisco.
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Re: [License-discuss] Can copyrights be abandoned to the public domain?

2012-08-14 Thread Karl Fogel
Ben Tilly bti...@gmail.com writes:
Based on http://www.linuxjournal.com/article/6225 and similar
articles, I'd long believed that a declaration that you were
abandoning copyright was a meaningless farce.

Then by accident today I ran across http://cr.yp.to/publicdomain.html
which claims the opposite, and cites actual court decisions as
evidence.

Is D. J. Bernstein out of his depth here, or does he have a valid point?

I realize this thread has already developed, but FWIW:

  http://opensource.org/faq#public-domain
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Re: [License-discuss] Can copyrights be abandoned to the public domain?

2012-08-14 Thread Rick Moen
Quoting Tom Callaway (tcall...@redhat.com):

 Indeed. If the question is: Is this legally possible?, the answer
 might very well be No, Yes, or Maybe, depending on the situation,
 the jurisdiction, and the case law at the time you ask the question.

This is what I tried to get across on my Web page, basically (along with 
pointing out that a simple permissive licence has more-deterministic
effects, and also clarifying that copyright abandonment and public
domain are distinct concepts).

 P.S. C A L L A W A Y. Like the golf clubs.

Yes, really sorry about that, Tom.  Naturally, I spotted it just after
posting.
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Re: [License-discuss] Can copyrights be abandoned to the public domain?

2012-08-14 Thread Oleksandr Gavenko
On 2012-08-14, Ben Tilly wrote:

 Based on http://www.linuxjournal.com/article/6225 and similar
 articles, I'd long believed that a declaration that you were
 abandoning copyright was a meaningless farce.

 Then by accident today I ran across http://cr.yp.to/publicdomain.html
 which claims the opposite, and cites actual court decisions as
 evidence.

 Is D. J. Bernstein out of his depth here, or does he have a valid point?

Look to Berne Convention for the Protection of Literary and Artistic Works
(my selections):

  http://www.wipo.int/treaties/en/ip/berne/trtdocs_wo001.html#P123_20726

  Article 6bis
  Moral Rights:
1. To claim authorship; to object to certain modifications and other
derogatory actions; 2. After the author's death; 3. Means of redress

  (1) Independently of the author's economic rights, and even after the
  transfer of the said rights, the author shall have the right to claim
  authorship of the work and to **object** to any distortion, mutilation or
  other **modification** of, or other derogatory **action** in relation to,
  the said work, which would be prejudicial to his honor or reputation.

Ever with any possible licence agreement that fully grand you permission
unlimitedly modify copyrighted work original author still can limit some
changes to his work if you fall under the jurisdiction of the countries which
sing Berne Convention.

Same applied to things that you state is in Public Domain in countries which
sing Berne Convention.

So while author alive you may be litigated by him if changes to his work
prejudicial his honour.

-- 
Best regards!
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Re: [License-discuss] Can copyrights be abandoned to the public domain?

2012-08-14 Thread Chris Travers
On Tue, Aug 14, 2012 at 8:52 AM, Tom Callaway tcall...@redhat.com wrote:
 On 08/14/2012 11:24 AM, Ben Tilly wrote:
 Based on http://www.linuxjournal.com/article/6225 and similar
 articles, I'd long believed that a declaration that you were
 abandoning copyright was a meaningless farce.

 Then by accident today I ran across http://cr.yp.to/publicdomain.html
 which claims the opposite, and cites actual court decisions as
 evidence.

 Is D. J. Bernstein out of his depth here, or does he have a valid point?

 This question is hotly debated, and the answer boils down to the worst
 sort of maybe, sortof, kindof. Ask 10 different lawyers, and you'll
 probably get 10 different answers. (Not to mention that the answer
 almost certainly changes based on the jurisdiction.)


It really depends.  I would assume that if you release anonymously and
explicitly disclaim copyright, that the code can be effectively public
domain.  I am not aware of any jurisdiction that forbids anonymous
publication, especially when the author seeks to remain anonymous.

I don't see how copyright can be enforced when it is both explicitly
disclaimed and the link with the author is severed.  There would be no
way to enforce it, nobody to go after for implicit warranties, etc.
After all it would be like asking whether an anonymous pamphlet left
at a college cafeteria was copyrighted.  IANAL though, but IIRC, the
Bern convention makes it sufficient that the author's name is
associated with the work for copyright to exist and this doesn't reach
that level.

Are there any cases where copyright could be enforced or required,
where code was anonymously published through a means not directly
traceable to the initial publication?  I mean if I put my code up on
privatepaste, and then link to in anonymous Slashdot comments, is it
still protected by copyright if it is not traceable to me?

Best Wishes,
Chris Travers
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Re: [License-discuss] Can copyrights be abandoned to the public domain?

2012-08-14 Thread John Cowan
Chris Travers scripsit:

 I don't see how copyright can be enforced when it is both explicitly
 disclaimed and the link with the author is severed.  There would be no
 way to enforce it, nobody to go after for implicit warranties, etc.

You could claim that it was illicitly published without your consent.

-- 
John Cowan  co...@ccil.org  http://ccil.org/~cowan
Micropayment advocates mistakenly believe that efficient allocation of
resources is the purpose of markets.  Efficiency is a byproduct of market
systems, not their goal.  The reasons markets work are not because users
have embraced efficiency but because markets are the best place to allow
users to maximize their preferences, and very often their preferences are
not for conservation of cheap resources.  --Clay Shirky
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Re: [License-discuss] Can copyrights be abandoned to the public domain?

2012-08-14 Thread Matthew Flaschen
On 08/14/2012 11:43 PM, Chris Travers wrote:

 I don't see how copyright can be enforced when it is both explicitly
 disclaimed and the link with the author is severed.  There would be no
 way to enforce it, nobody to go after for implicit warranties, etc.
 After all it would be like asking whether an anonymous pamphlet left
 at a college cafeteria was copyrighted.

Disclaiming it as PD is again the key topic.  Anonymous works are still
copyrighted, at least in the U.S.
(http://www.copyright.gov/title17/92chap3.html):

In the case of an anonymous work, a pseudonymous work, or a work made
for hire, the copyright endures for a term of 95 years from the year of
its first publication, or a term of 120 years from the year of its
creation, whichever expires first.

Not only that, but:

If, before the end of such term, the identity of one or more of the
authors of an anonymous or pseudonymous work is revealed in the records
of a registration made for that work under subsections (a) or (d) of
section 408, or in the records provided by this subsection, the
copyright in the work endures for the term specified by subsection (a)
or (b), based on the life of the author or authors whose identity has
been revealed.

Of course, you have to provide evidence of who the anonymous author was,
but without an effective PD dedication, that alleged revelation could
open up a legal battle-field.

Matt Flaschen
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Re: [License-discuss] Can copyrights be abandoned to the public domain?

2012-08-14 Thread Rick Moen
Quoting Chris Travers (ch...@metatrontech.com):

 I would assume that if you release anonymously and explicitly disclaim
 copyright, that the code can be effectively public domain. 

If you would trust the provenance of code like that, you're a braver man
than I am.

-- 
Cheers,  Overheard a hipster say 'Quinoa is kind of 2011',
Rick Moenso I lit his beard on fire.  -- Kelly Oxford
r...@linuxmafia.com
McQ!  (4x80)
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