Lisa Gielczyk (TCP) wrote: > It's a theology article. Someone is quoting a sermon out of context, > making it look like the speaker was making one theological point when, > in context, he was making a different theological point. > >
That's a violation of copyright law. The speaker has an inherent copyright in his original words. Misappropriating them this was is a violation. If the preacher (even now) were to register the copyright with the Library of Congress, he or she could find a lawyer who would be happy to sue the pants off the person doing the misquoting. ______________________________________________ Author Help files and create printed documentation with Doc-To-Help. New release adds Team Authoring Support, enhanced Web-based help technology and PDF output. Learn more at www.doctohelp.com/tcp. Interactive 3D Documentation Parts catalogs, animated instructions, and more. www.i3deverywhere.com _______________________________________________ Technical Communication Professionals Post a message to the list: email [EMAIL PROTECTED] Subscribe, unsubscribe, archives, account options, list info: http://techcommpros.com/mailman/listinfo/tcp_techcommpros.com Subscribe (email): send a blank message to [EMAIL PROTECTED] Unsubscribe (email): send a blank message to [EMAIL PROTECTED] Need help? Contact [EMAIL PROTECTED] Get the TCP whole experience! http://www.techcommpros.com
