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#11
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![]() "Stev eH" With the global nature of the Internet sooner or later they will all appear on a server located somewhere outside USA rule..... Steve H They are on a DK server right now ![]() best when the dust and tempers settle. |
#12
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Geoffrey S. Mendelson wrote:
Scott Dorsey wrote: wrote: I did a google on Copyright laws and I understand that copy righted manuals are protected for the LIFE of the owner plus 75 years.. In the US, it's around 100 years, going back retroactively to anything that was still under copyright. I think the start date had to do with the first full length Disney film. Geoff. Actually it was a pretty Mickey Mouse thing. The copyright on Mickey was expiring so Walt Disney Productions got the law changed. Dave |
#13
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Please enlighten me what is the DK server.
"Tio Pedro" wrote in message ... "Stev eH" With the global nature of the Internet sooner or later they will all appear on a server located somewhere outside USA rule..... Steve H They are on a DK server right now ![]() best when the dust and tempers settle. |
#14
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![]() "Jump'n Jack Flash" wrote in message ... Please enlighten me what is the DK server. http://www.mods.dk/manual.php |
#15
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Tio Pedro wrote:
They are on a DK server right now ![]() best when the dust and tempers settle. They won't be for long. That server exists because of a "don't ask, don't tell" policy from the owners of the copyrights of many of the manuals. Legally if they can prove 10 copies of any one manual have been downloaded, they can file suit under the Berne Convention, and have InterPol knocking at their door demanding download records. The whole process will cost the copyright owners less than $1000, and probably put the site and similar ones out of business. If they do secure the download logs, then they have four years from the date they were first notified to sue them for damages. If they decide to sue them or not, it does not place the manuals in the public domain. Copyrights do not need to be reapplied for, nor enforced to stay in effect. The requirement to renew them has long since been dropped. At this point, no copyrighted US work will have its protection expire for almost 20 years, so you can't easily wait them out. If German (and now EU) law allows the copyrights to expire or fair use as defined in the EU allows them to be downloaded, the copyright owners could force them to not allow downloads of copyrighted US manuals to US residents, which would basicly put them out of business. IMHO the best thing the people who run the DK server can do is to remove the Heath manuals and hope it ends there. Geoff. -- Geoffrey S. Mendelson, Jerusalem, Israel N3OWJ/4X1GM |
#16
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![]() "Geoffrey S. Mendelson" wrote in message At this point, no copyrighted US work will have its protection expire for almost 20 years, so you can't easily wait them out. If German (and now EU) law allows the copyrights to expire or fair use as defined in the EU allows them to be downloaded, the copyright owners could force them to not allow downloads of copyrighted US manuals to US residents, which would basicly put them out of business. Geoff. -- Geoffrey S. Mendelson, Jerusalem, Israel N3OWJ/4X1GM Well, you are welcome to your opinion, but the copyrights prior to a certain date in the 60s HAD to be renewed to be still in effect. The copyright owner has admitted this, and he has stated that a few manuals are no longer protected. I have no bone to pick in this beef, since I usually buy the manuals for any equipment that I own. This has all been hashed out in the Heathkit forum on the Yahoo! users's group (public access for reading postings) between the users and the new copyright owner. |
#17
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Tio Pedro wrote:
Well, you are welcome to your opinion, but the copyrights prior to a certain date in the 60s HAD to be renewed to be still in effect. The copyright owner has admitted this, and he has stated that a few manuals are no longer protected. Those items were originally copyrighted in the 1930's and before. Since Heath did not exist then, the first manuals copyrights dated from the late 1940's, which have all now been retroactively extended for at least 100 years from date of publication. Anything copyrighted in the US since the release of the first full length Disney movie (I think it is Snow White) is covered. From what I remember (does anyone have an actual citation?) copyrights until that time were 35 years and could be renewed for 35 more. Patents were 18 with an 18 year renewal and that could be a source of confusion. If it was indeed 35 years, and the first Heath manual was published in 1947, then its copyright protection would have expired in 1982, long after the requirment for renewal was dropped and the term extended. Outside of the US, e.g. Canada and the EU recognize both legal and moral rights and IMHO it would be next to impossible to convince a judge that the person who purchased the rights to the manuals from their owner did not have a moral right to them as opposed to some guy with a website who gave away free download privledges to other manuals in exchange for another file he could give away. I have no bone to pick in this beef, since I usually buy the manuals for any equipment that I own. This has all been hashed out in the Heathkit forum on the Yahoo! users's group (public access for reading postings) between the users and the new copyright owner. He may not be correct. The current copyright regulations are quite new and many people do not completely understand them. I am among those that do not, it is possible that he is too. Geoff. -- Geoffrey S. Mendelson, Jerusalem, Israel N3OWJ/4X1GM |
#18
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On Thu, 1 Jan 2009, Geoffrey S. Mendelson wrote:
Tio Pedro wrote: Well, you are welcome to your opinion, but the copyrights prior to a certain date in the 60s HAD to be renewed to be still in effect. The copyright owner has admitted this, and he has stated that a few manuals are no longer protected. Those items were originally copyrighted in the 1930's and before. Since Heath did not exist then, the first manuals copyrights dated from the late 1940's, which have all now been retroactively extended for at least 100 years from date of publication. Either you're misreading the copyright laws, or people deeply involved in it have misread it. If you go to Project Gutenberg, you can find "Tom Corbett Space Cadet" books there. They date from the fifties. You can also find H. Beam Piper books, dating from about the same time. These are only two examples that I've stumbled upon, but which stood out since they are indeed relatively recent. My expectation was that all you'd find there would be "classics" hundreds of years old. LIke I pointed out earlier in the thread, these books have fallen out of copyright because there was a brief period where books did not stay in copyright unless specifically extended. And some did not bother extending the copyrights, for whatevever reasons. That's the premise of Project Gutenberg and those fifty year old books. Since they'be been putting uncopyrighted books into electronic form for almost forty years, one might expect them to know what they were talking about. One might also expect them to get into trouble if they had something there that is still in copyright, after all they are fairly visible and have been for a long time. As I pointed out Jeff Duntemann has pointed out the same thing, and used the database to check on some books. Apparently Don Stoner's SSB book published by CQ fifty years ago is amongst those books no longer in copyright. That site, I don't have the URL handy, that has old editions of the ARRL Handbook and the Radiotron Designer's Handbook and plenty of other old technical books, he's using the same premise. He's not some guy who's merely posting things regardless of their copyright, he has done checks to ensure the books are no longer in copyright. He may be mistaken about specific titles, but he seems to know what he's talking about generally. Michael VE2BVW Anything copyrighted in the US since the release of the first full length Disney movie (I think it is Snow White) is covered. From what I remember (does anyone have an actual citation?) copyrights until that time were 35 years and could be renewed for 35 more. Patents were 18 with an 18 year renewal and that could be a source of confusion. If it was indeed 35 years, and the first Heath manual was published in 1947, then its copyright protection would have expired in 1982, long after the requirment for renewal was dropped and the term extended. Outside of the US, e.g. Canada and the EU recognize both legal and moral rights and IMHO it would be next to impossible to convince a judge that the person who purchased the rights to the manuals from their owner did not have a moral right to them as opposed to some guy with a website who gave away free download privledges to other manuals in exchange for another file he could give away. I have no bone to pick in this beef, since I usually buy the manuals for any equipment that I own. This has all been hashed out in the Heathkit forum on the Yahoo! users's group (public access for reading postings) between the users and the new copyright owner. He may not be correct. The current copyright regulations are quite new and many people do not completely understand them. I am among those that do not, it is possible that he is too. Geoff. -- Geoffrey S. Mendelson, Jerusalem, Israel N3OWJ/4X1GM |
#19
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For those interested in copyright issues, here's a place to start.
http://www.copyright.gov/ Phil Nelson Phil's Old Radios http://antiqueradio.org/index.html |
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