>> If you think there is some legally relevant document which means
that a ...
>> work of an earlier edition), please cite that specific document.
On Thu, Jun 17, 2004 at 04:41:42PM -0400, Michael Poole wrote:
> http://digital-law-online.info/lpdi1.0/treatise6.html discusses the
> differences between derivative works and compilations, and quotes
> a congressional report that elaborates:
...
> See also http://www.copyright.gov/circs/circ14.html, which remarks
> both that the whole of the derivative work must represent an
> original work of authorship, rather than an arrangement of distinct
> works, and that mechanical (non-creative, ergo non-copyrightable)
> transformation of the original does not make a derivative.
Ok, this is good -- I did not know that.
However -- by this definition, the linux kernel is very definitely a
derivative work, and the firmware is content which has been
incorporated into the kernel.
According to what you just cited, the concept of a collective work
doesn't enter into the picture at all.