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Re: Question About GNU General Public License
From: |
David Kastrup |
Subject: |
Re: Question About GNU General Public License |
Date: |
19 Jul 2004 11:50:54 +0200 |
User-agent: |
Gnus/5.09 (Gnus v5.9.0) Emacs/21.3.50 |
<telford@xenon.triode.net.au> writes:
> In gnu.misc.discuss David Kastrup <dak@gnu.org> wrote:
> > <telford@xenon.triode.net.au> writes:
>
> >> In gnu.misc.discuss David Kastrup <dak@gnu.org> wrote:
> >>
> >> > My eyesight seems to get worse. I fail to see a quote of a court
> >> > ruling stating that extracted symbol tables would not fall under
> >> > the original copyright.
> >>
> >> I'm pretty sure a symbol table would fall under the "phonebook"
> >> ruling that a table of facts presented in obvious
> >> (i.e. non-creative) format and ordering cannot be considered a
> >> creative work.
>
> > Who claimed that it was?
>
> If the end result of the derivation has no creative content then
> there is a good argument that it is not protected by copyright.
I'd say it has no _new_ creative content, but it is an extraction of
creative content.
> There may have been creative content in the source material but the
> derivation process is in this case a process that extracts only a
> table of facts and not the creative elements.
But the "facts" are idiosyncratic to the creative elements. If I
make a list of all set bits in the source material, this is not
something creative.
> Remember that officially, the creative content of programming is the
> arangement of instructions in a particular order to achieve a
> purpose. A symbol table contains no arrangement of instructions.
But it is an immediate consequence of such an arrangement, like the
list of all set bits.
> Another example: google counts the number of times various keywords
> are used in various websites. A count of keywords is a mechanical
> derivative of the original site content but no one has even
> attempted to claim derivative work status of google's index data on
> this basis (same for any search engine).
Well, you can't claim damages in this case because Google only
summarizes data that is openly available, anyhow.
--
David Kastrup, Kriemhildstr. 15, 44793 Bochum
- Re: Question About GNU General Public License, (continued)
- Re: Question About GNU General Public License, telford, 2004/07/18
- Re: Question About GNU General Public License, David Kastrup, 2004/07/18
- Re: Question About GNU General Public License, John Hasler, 2004/07/18
- Re: Question About GNU General Public License, David Kastrup, 2004/07/18
- Re: Question About GNU General Public License, John Hasler, 2004/07/20
- Re: Question About GNU General Public License, Stefaan A Eeckels, 2004/07/20
- Re: Question About GNU General Public License, John Hasler, 2004/07/20
- Re: Question About GNU General Public License, Isaac, 2004/07/18
- Re: Question About GNU General Public License, Lee Hollaar, 2004/07/18
- Re: Question About GNU General Public License, telford, 2004/07/18
- Re: Question About GNU General Public License,
David Kastrup <=
- Re: Question About GNU General Public License, Alexander Terekhov, 2004/07/19
- Re: Question About GNU General Public License, Isaac, 2004/07/13
- Re: Question About GNU General Public License, David Kastrup, 2004/07/13
- Re: Question About GNU General Public License, Isaac, 2004/07/13
- Re: Question About GNU General Public License, Rui Miguel Seabra, 2004/07/13
- Message not available
- Re: Question About GNU General Public License, Alexander Terekhov, 2004/07/13
- Re: Question About GNU General Public License, David Kastrup, 2004/07/13
- Re: Question About GNU General Public License, Alexander Terekhov, 2004/07/13
- Re: Question About GNU General Public License, David Kastrup, 2004/07/13
- Re: Question About GNU General Public License, Alexander Terekhov, 2004/07/13