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On 6/18/06, David Hoffman <zionicman@gmail.com> wrote: > > On 6/18/06, Dennis Olvany <dennisolvany@gmail.com> wrote: > > > >> ...facts are not eligible for copyright. > > > > > I'm afraid you're incorrect. The work in question is indeed > > copyrightable > > > under the Berne Convention, which many countries have ratified, > > including > > > the United States, where the content is hosted. The United States, as > > well > > > as many other countries, also have national laws which allow this work > > > to be > > > copyrighted. > > > > At best, the article may be considered a derivative work of the > > described software/hardware and therefore the intellectual property of > > the respective manufacturers. > > > > > First you say only 'literary or artistic' works, and not 'facts' (hint: > the article was more than just facts), are elligible for copyright, and now > you say that, not only are 'facts' elligible for copyright, but that they > hold such a strong copyright that works which refer to facts published > elsewhere are necessarily derivative and are not elligible for a seperate > copyright by the writer. Which is it? You can't have both. And, really, > you can't have either: there are a multitude of works that are 'derivative' > in the sense you describe, yet hold perfectly valid copyrights. Don't > believe me? Try hosting a bunch of O'Reilly books on a site hosted in a > country that respects copyright. > > Now, even if you're correct that Brett doesn't have a valid copyright > (which he does) and that unspecified entities unknown own the copyright to > the article (which they don't), we still have the same problem: FreeBSD > claiming to own something they don't, and not even attributing it to its > true authors. > _______________________________________________ freebsd-chat@freebsd.org mailing list http://lists.freebsd.org/mailman/listinfo/freebsd-chat To unsubscribe, send any mail to "freebsd-chat-unsubscribe@freebsd.org"