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#21
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On Oct 7, 6:56 am, OFFICIAL RAM BLUEBOOK VALUATION
wrote: wrote in message om Australian law says that when an employee creates a book, the employer owns it. The term of the copyright for such a corporate copyright under Australian law is for the *author's life plus 70 years from the year after his death*. Since first publication was 1953, with revised and expanded editions following until 1967, the RDH4 cannot even begin to go out of copyright before at least 2024 and possibly not even until 2038. This is such a profoundly stupid complaint you have, Mr. McJute. Let's assume that the copyright *IS* still owned by RDH4, or whoever you THINK owns it. In order to enforce their copyright, they would have to engage in legal actions. This would normally start with a "cease and desist" letter. For any publishing company, this would require at least a meeting between attorney and probably several management level employees, the lawyer would then go off and research the issue, and write the C&D. This would then be forwarded back the the client; they would circulate the draft among the management employees and likely have at least minor changes to the form and substance of the letter. The attorney would rewrite, and assuming all goes well receive approval from the client to issue it. The attorney would then need to locate the exact details of the owner of the website in question (and from what I gather this material is routinely available from a number of websites). Research would be done and perhaps at long last the C&D would be sent, probably by some kind of signed courier. Total cost? Easily US$5000, perhaps up to US$10,000. Large publishing concerns have attorneys on staff, who have nothing else to do, besides this. It takes one about ten minutes to run off a form letter and send it FedEx to the people involved. It takes even less to send an email stating that we believe this is inappropriate use of our IP to someone's ISP. We are talking fifty to a hundred dollars of company time as internally billed. Even if the amount is trivial, large publishers, and most small ones, do the level best they can to stop unauthorized use of any and all lawful IP. If you in good faith, with an active email address, put up something not in the public domain it will not be long before you hear about it. RDH 4 is absolutely and positively public domain now. A lot of desireable material isn't and arguably ought to be. I have of course written my legislators, two of which are neocon fellating whores and one basically a lazy careerist, so it is a waste of postage. but what I view as good citizenship on my part. |
#22
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Bret Ludwig wrote:
Large publishing concerns have attorneys on staff, who have nothing else to do, besides this. It takes one about ten minutes to run off a form letter and send it FedEx to the people involved. It takes even less to send an email stating that we believe this is inappropriate use of our IP to someone's ISP. We are talking fifty to a hundred dollars of company time as internally billed. Even if the amount is trivial, large publishers, and most small ones, do the level best they can to stop unauthorized use of any and all lawful IP. If you in good faith, with an active email address, put up something not in the public domain it will not be long before you hear about it. RDH 4 is absolutely and positively public domain now. A lot of desireable material isn't and arguably ought to be. I have of course written my legislators, two of which are neocon fellating whores and one basically a lazy careerist, so it is a waste of postage. but what I view as good citizenship on my part. I have a friend, a retired lawyer who once worked for McGraw-Hill. He does not normally read the newsgroups but I sent him the google link to this thread, and he emailed me back his response. Here it is: "Mr. Ludwig is absolutely correct when he says that the large concerns have many lawyers and paralegals on staff who are solely devoted to tracking down infringing parties. Much of that activity stems from the fact that U.S. copyright law and legal precedent demands that the holders of copyright defend their properties vigorously or risk loss of the copyright. So, if an infringement is discovered, the identified infringer will be sent a C & D letter, even if the material in question is of little immediate value to the holder. The C & D letter costs the holder very little to send, and will at least establish some diligence on the part of the copyright holder to assert and protect the holder's copyright of the material. Most of the time, the infringer takes steps to stop the infringement upon receipt of the letter, and that's the end of that. It is situations where the infringer does not act-ignores the C & D letter- where the decision of what to do next becomes dicey. If the material is an original, artistic work, then the publisher who holds copyright will most likely go ahead with a lawsuit, because there is at least some possibility that the work will continue to be enjoyed by a significant number of people far into the future. However, in the case of old, outdated reference material, there is likely going to be some sort of a value test done before the holder will go further. In a perfect world, the holder would take whatever action is necessary to stop infringement in every single instance, but the world we live in is one that is driven by economics and practicality. If the materials in question are non-artistic, antiquated, and out-of-print, the up-front costs of securing a judgement against an infringer will likely exceed the value of the item being infringed. Although there are mechanisms to recover some of these costs from an infringing party that chooses to ignore a C & D letter, the reality is that recovery of these costs in the short term is often quite difficult, and often difficult in the longer term as well. The holder may well find that they have spent all this money to pursue an infringer who has no assets that can be attached. The phrase "you can't squeeze blood from a stone" really applies here. It is for this reason that casual copyright infringement, which occurs millions of times per day on the internet, is rarely prosecuted. With regards to Mr Jute, his interpretation of the strength of Australian copyright law, as it applies in the USA, is quite fanciful, to say the least. If you are going to prosecute an infringer in an American court, the law that is going to referenced in that case is American law, period. Australian law will only be considered to the extent that it matches the American statutes exactly. If the publication dates stated previously are correct, then the "RDH4" publication that is being discussed here had a USA copyright period of 28 years before entering public domain UNLESS the holder took explicit legal steps to extend the period another 28 years (later expanded to 65 years and modified again to 70 years beyond the author's death). No extension, no protection now for works produced in that era. In the case of a reference work such as the "RDH4" the question of whether or not the copyright was extended is FAR from certain. There are many that were extended and many more that were not. If the person who is publishing it on the internet has not received a C&D letter within a few weeks or months, I would suspect that the "RDH4" is indeed public domain at this point, but I would not be certain. Now, a publisher might choose to pursue litigation in an Australian court, and might get a judgement there, but all of the same issues of recouping the costs outlined above come into play, and if the infringer is located in some other place than Australia the difficulty of recouping those costs take on a whole new dimension." So, there you have it....An opinion from someone who has been there, done that. -Scott |
#23
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You haven't read the threads, Scott. We are not at the moment talking
about US copyright but about the thieves Gregg, Tim Williams and Choky Prodanovic who claim that their lies about Canadaian copyright protects their theft of the RDH4. Last time I heard, Canada was not yet a State in United States of America. As I have already pointed out to the permanently irrelevant Flipper, it is a particularly American arrogance to assume when someone shouts "Stop, thief!" that all Americans should instantly call their attorneys to start blowing smoke to cover their guilt. I'll see you when I start on the US copyright thieves. Meanwhile, if you want to play, raise your eyes to the horizon. Andre Jute Hell, these days even Chinese smoke is superior to made-in-the-USA smoke On Oct 8, 10:57 pm, "Scott W. Harvey" wrote: Bret Ludwig wrote: Large publishing concerns have attorneys on staff, who have nothing else to do, besides this. It takes one about ten minutes to run off a form letter and send it FedEx to the people involved. It takes even less to send an email stating that we believe this is inappropriate use of our IP to someone's ISP. We are talking fifty to a hundred dollars of company time as internally billed. Even if the amount is trivial, large publishers, and most small ones, do the level best they can to stop unauthorized use of any and all lawful IP. If you in good faith, with an active email address, put up something not in the public domain it will not be long before you hear about it. RDH 4 is absolutely and positively public domain now. A lot of desireable material isn't and arguably ought to be. I have of course written my legislators, two of which are neocon fellating whores and one basically a lazy careerist, so it is a waste of postage. but what I view as good citizenship on my part. I have a friend, a retired lawyer who once worked for McGraw-Hill. He does not normally read the newsgroups but I sent him the google link to this thread, and he emailed me back his response. Here it is: "Mr. Ludwig is absolutely correct when he says that the large concerns have many lawyers and paralegals on staff who are solely devoted to tracking down infringing parties. Much of that activity stems from the fact that U.S. copyright law and legal precedent demands that the holders of copyright defend their properties vigorously or risk loss of the copyright. So, if an infringement is discovered, the identified infringer will be sent a C & D letter, even if the material in question is of little immediate value to the holder. The C & D letter costs the holder very little to send, and will at least establish some diligence on the part of the copyright holder to assert and protect the holder's copyright of the material. Most of the time, the infringer takes steps to stop the infringement upon receipt of the letter, and that's the end of that. It is situations where the infringer does not act-ignores the C & D letter- where the decision of what to do next becomes dicey. If the material is an original, artistic work, then the publisher who holds copyright will most likely go ahead with a lawsuit, because there is at least some possibility that the work will continue to be enjoyed by a significant number of people far into the future. However, in the case of old, outdated reference material, there is likely going to be some sort of a value test done before the holder will go further. In a perfect world, the holder would take whatever action is necessary to stop infringement in every single instance, but the world we live in is one that is driven by economics and practicality. If the materials in question are non-artistic, antiquated, and out-of-print, the up-front costs of securing a judgement against an infringer will likely exceed the value of the item being infringed. Although there are mechanisms to recover some of these costs from an infringing party that chooses to ignore a C & D letter, the reality is that recovery of these costs in the short term is often quite difficult, and often difficult in the longer term as well. The holder may well find that they have spent all this money to pursue an infringer who has no assets that can be attached. The phrase "you can't squeeze blood from a stone" really applies here. It is for this reason that casual copyright infringement, which occurs millions of times per day on the internet, is rarely prosecuted. With regards to Mr Jute, his interpretation of the strength of Australian copyright law, as it applies in the USA, is quite fanciful, to say the least. If you are going to prosecute an infringer in an American court, the law that is going to referenced in that case is American law, period. Australian law will only be considered to the extent that it matches the American statutes exactly. If the publication dates stated previously are correct, then the "RDH4" publication that is being discussed here had a USA copyright period of 28 years before entering public domain UNLESS the holder took explicit legal steps to extend the period another 28 years (later expanded to 65 years and modified again to 70 years beyond the author's death). No extension, no protection now for works produced in that era. In the case of a reference work such as the "RDH4" the question of whether or not the copyright was extended is FAR from certain. There are many that were extended and many more that were not. If the person who is publishing it on the internet has not received a C&D letter within a few weeks or months, I would suspect that the "RDH4" is indeed public domain at this point, but I would not be certain. Now, a publisher might choose to pursue litigation in an Australian court, and might get a judgement there, but all of the same issues of recouping the costs outlined above come into play, and if the infringer is located in some other place than Australia the difficulty of recouping those costs take on a whole new dimension." So, there you have it....An opinion from someone who has been there, done that. -Scott |
#24
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![]() "Andre Jute" wrote in message oups.com... You haven't read the threads, Scott. We are not at the moment talking about US copyright but about the thieves Gregg, Tim Williams and Choky Prodanovic who claim that their lies about Canadaian copyright protects their theft of the RDH4. Horse****! |
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