Hi :)
Thanks Jay :) That is quite different from my assumption. I'm not sure about
the laws here but i suspect someone would have ownership of the rights.
Regards from
Tom :)
________________________________
From: planas <jslozier@gmail.com>
To: users@global.libreoffice.org
Sent: Sat, 13 August, 2011 22:33:44
Subject: Re: [libreoffice-users] Pimaco extension for labels
Hi,
On Sat, 2011-08-13 at 12:54 +0100, Tom Davies wrote:
Hi :)
Thanks Sigrid. Copy-left agreements such as the Creative Commons used in
artworks, video, documentation and elsewhere is a very new concept that can
allow people to copy, modify and redistribute.
The traditional idea of "public domain" is merely that you are allowed to read
it and if you are really lucky you might be allowed to copy a certain number
of
lines. The laws around it are quite turgid, confusing and vary from country to
country.
TDF Documentation Team often use a "CC by SA" (a Creative Commons) license.
Creative Commons offer a variety of approaches allowing authors, sculptors,
artists, musicians and others to decide just how flexible they want to be about
allowing people to redistribution or modify or give credit to the person that
created the original.
Regards from
Tom :)
________________________________
From: Sigrid Carrera <sigrid.carrera@googlemail.com>
To: users@global.libreoffice.org
Sent: Sat, 13 August, 2011 11:20:56
Subject: Re: [libreoffice-users] Pimaco extension for labels
Hi,
On Fri, 12 Aug 2011 17:16:14 -0700
"Dennis E. Hamilton" <dennis.hamilton@acm.org> wrote:
Um, that statement makes no sense. Public domain documents require no
license. They are either someone's copyright and licensed under the GPL or
there's a quit claim on the copyright and no license applies.
I think the statement makes perfect sense. There are countries, where you
cannot
give up your rights (Germany and I think many other EU countries as well).
I would interpret this then in the following way:
If you live in a country where you can give up your rights, you can get those
templates as "public domain".
If you live in a country where you cannot give up your rights, you can get
those
templetes under the "GPL".
Sounds reasonable to me.
Sigrid
In the US public domain means the copyright has lapsed any one is free
to use the work as they please with requirements or fees. The only
"requirement" is you should properly cite the work but this more an
ethical issue than a legal one. For example many works on 19th century
American authors are now in the public domain so any one can publish the
work in any media. If one does some editing (changing spellings, idioms,
etc) to reflect current usage that can carry a copyright.
--
Jay Lozier
jslozier@gmail.com
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