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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. |
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