Hi,

On 06/17/11 16:39, andrzej zaborowski wrote:
1. IIRC the newer versions of CC-By-SA include statements to ensure
that the content is not protected by database rights, patents or DRM,
which would prevent their uses.

News to me. Do you have a pointer?

It is true that CC-BY-SA, for as long as I can think, has had a section that said something like you may not slap on restrictions that diminish the rights granted by the license, or something. That was meant against DRM, or against a simple "I sell you this CC-BY-SA map tile but only if you sign the additional contract here that says you may not distribute it" or so.

But that applied only the the rights granted by the license; and the rights granted by the license were basically to do stuff that is normally restricted by *copyright*.

Stuff that is normally restricted by patents (for example) was never covered by CC-BY-SA in the first place, so the "you may not add restrictions" rule didn't apply.

2. What happens if a person in country A with database rights
publishes a tileset and licenses it under CC-By-SA to a person in
country B without database rights?  The second person is then as far
as I can see not bound by database rights or a contract.  Is that
incorrect?

This is a difficult issue and I am in no way certain, but the reverse engineering discussion has at the very least brought the result that you cannot "wash away" database right by going via another country, i.e. if you take something to which database rights apply in Europe, then go to the US and publish it there as PD, then someone else from Europe takes the US product, then the database rights will magically reappear, i.e. even though something could legally be PD in the US, someone in Europe might be prohibited from using it.

Bye
Frederik

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