On Thu, Sep 08, 2005 at 10:46:32AM -0700, Sean Kellogg wrote: > But what is clear is that a derivative work requires an act of copying the > original work of authorship. The caselaw in question is Lee v. A.R.T. Co. > (125 F.3d 580) where someone took a piece of art they purchased, fused it to > an ashtray or something and then resold it. The original artist said that > was a derivative work and the sale was illegal. The court found that it was > not a derivative work because no copies were being made. A legal copy was > merged with something else and the first sale doctrine bared A.R.T. Co. from > prohibiting resale of its original art. > > So with shared libraries the question is not whether it extends functionality, <snip irrelevant distraction about technicalities of shared libraries> It'd be nice if this fairly optimistic view of copyright as applied to software would be upheld in the real world, because it would mean we could stop worrying about derivative works and modify[0] anything we liked; the only limitation would be on distribution (be even nicer if we could scrap that too, which would mean copyright wouldn't exist and the only requirement for being free software would be that you have the source). But I'm not hopeful that it would be, particularly since all the corporations and lawyers seem to think otherwise. Also, this completely defeats the GPL, permitting proprietary software to be based on it and making it functionally equivalent to the LGPL. Of course, if this were upheld in court, everybody would just leap to using contracts instead of licenses, and explicitly prohibiting quasi-derivation-via-merging. Enough courts have already upheld that you can substitute a contract for a copyright license and ignore all the limitations of copyright law. [0] I can trivially implement, in a matter of a few hours, a system which will let you modify any piece of software you have on a given platform in a manner that could only be described as 'merging it with something else'. If your platform is perl or some similar ASCII-text script, the system is patch(1). With minimal extra effort I can ensure that this happens only at execution time, and that no copies are stored. -- .''`. ** Debian GNU/Linux ** | Andrew Suffield : :' : http://www.debian.org/ | `. `' | `- -><- |
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