I not long ago received a photocopy of a hand-drawn map of the roadway network 
within a company's manufacturing site, complete with street names (no, I'm not 
a spy :-) - it's all legal and above board).  The streets were most all present 
in the TIGER data import, but lacked names.  However, I chose not to take the 
names from the tantalizing piece of paper and affix them to the streets in OSM. 
 I am pretty sure that the business would not have minded, and would likely 
have said "yes" if I'd put the question to them about inputting the 
information.  That hand-drawn map, though, was a product of an employee of the 
business, and the work of the employees as part of their job is owned by the 
business; therefore, there is an implicit copyright held by the business on the 
information in that hand-drawn map.

This raises a related interesting situation.  Let's say that the business is 
indeed interested in putting their street names onto OSM so that they can use 
the OSM map for internal purposes and they want to dot the i's and cross the 
t's properly.  Your typical employee with this information could not input it 
on her own, though, because the individual employee does not have the power to 
suspend the copyright on the information and release it under CCSA.  Rather, 
such release would need to go through internal legal channels and be approved 
by someone who does have the authority to sign away the copyright; such 
authority may be vested jointly in the head legal counsel and the President of 
the business.

Thus, what began with a hand-drawn map with street names ends up at the top of 
the business food chain and slides back down the chain with a legal rider as 
long as your arm disavowing the company of any harm which may arise from the 
use of this information should it turn out to be incorrect or out of date.

Looking at accessible street signs suddenly seems much easier in light of this. 

Be careful with that, though.  If there are street signs on the manufacturing 
site, could the employee walk the site, collect the information manually, then 
input it into OSM?  Probably not (if they want to keep working there), because 
that would be using their privileged access to the site to collect business 
intelligence and subsequently release it.  In principle, this is no different 
from peering over a colleague's shoulder then emailing a competitor with the 
information so collected.

--ceyockey

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