[LEAPSECS] private smear goes public
Poul-Henning Kamp
phk at phk.freebsd.dk
Fri Dec 2 17:17:53 EST 2016
--------
In message <B400409C-0655-4C51-83B1-5CF3B19D60F6 at develooper.com>, =?utf-8?Q?Ask_Bj=C3=B8rn_Hansen?= writes:
>> It does not have any copyright claims on it I can identify. Not
>> do the other related files, like
>> https://hpiers.obspm.fr/eoppc/bul/bulc/Leap_Second_History.dat.
>>
>> Seems to me any copyright claim would defeat the IERS purposes.
>> Seems to me if there were such it would have to be stated in Bulletin
>> C itself.
>
>You don't need to "claim copyright" to have it. You need to license to allow others to use your work.
While that is true, there are a lot of fine print.
First, licensing can and often is implied.
This is generally the case if you distribute your own work widely
with no indication of intention to enforce your copyright later on.
If you want to assert and defend your "mercantile rights", you need
to state that up front, with a big fat copyright notice, from day 1.
Second, there are exceptions for fair use, which almost certainly
applies here, since leap seconds have legal force in most countries.
The only relevant situation where copyright matters for Bulletin-C,
is if somebody replaces IERS name&address with something else.
That would be an attack on IERS's (directors) "ideal right" to
be associated with the work as its creator.
The ideal rights does not require marking, because nobody who
violates them can possible be in doubt that they didn't create
the work themselves [1].
So as long as you reproduce Bulletin C verbatim, there can not
and will not be any copyright issues[2].
Poul-Henning
[1] This is where the trouble starts with music: There are
only so many guitar-riffs, and parallel creation is bound
to happen. Ask Led Zeppelin for details.
[2] I wonder if anybody bothered to actually ask IERS director, or
if this is just the usual navel-gazing and circle-jerking from
militant FOSS license-separatists ?
--
Poul-Henning Kamp | UNIX since Zilog Zeus 3.20
phk at FreeBSD.ORG | TCP/IP since RFC 956
FreeBSD committer | BSD since 4.3-tahoe
Never attribute to malice what can adequately be explained by incompetence.
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