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Re: GNU Free Database License
From: |
Anas R. |
Subject: |
Re: GNU Free Database License |
Date: |
Thu, 21 Sep 2006 21:15:03 +0300 |
>Again, this assertion seems completely bizarre. If it were so, why
>would we regard some dictionaries' definitions as better than others?
>There is not a single, correct definition of any English word. There
>are many ways of describing what a word means, and coming up with a
>good one is a creative process.
>
> -- Richard
Exactly,
You can read the same story from two different writers, and you might see a big
differance,
because one of them can find (better words) to describe the events, the views,
and light your imagination!
>Well, a photo isn't a "fact", while a dictionary is a list of facts
>(definitins). And you cannot copyright a fact (or has this been
>changed recently?), like the fact that "hello is a common greeting
>used in the English language". What you can copyright is the
>presentation of said fact. So a dictionary is copyrighted, but only
>in the sense of how it presents its "facts". Much like you can
>copyright the presentation of phonebook, e.g. using some specialised
>layout. But you cannot copyright the name + number in that phone
>book, since that is considered a `fact'.
>
>Cheers.
Names + Phone Numbers are definitely facts, but not word definitions, they are
debatable.
Re: GNU Free Database License, Anas R., 2006/09/21
Re: GNU Free Database License, Anas R., 2006/09/21
Re: GNU Free Database License,
Anas R. <=
Re: GNU Free Database License, John Hasler, 2006/09/21