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Hi Roy,
"Roy Lewallen" wrote in message ... I suggest keeping more like $20,000. The last time I checked with my lawyer, that was the maximum penalty for willful copyright infringement, in addition to any monetary damages which could be proved. All that's necessary to get the $20k, I was told, is to prove that the infringement was willful, not that any financial damage occurred. This might be better posted at college libraries in the copy rooms where students routinely Xerox entire books ostensibly because they can't afford the real thing (which I suspect is rarely true, and it's usually more a case of wanting to spend the money on an Xbox rather than a book)... rather than at some ham who's scanning old magazines as a form of public service when the originals are difficult to obtain for an audience that generally would pay for them if they were. People seem to have less and less compunction against stealing intellectual property, I suppose because it keeps getting easier to do. I agree with you in general, although I think that scanning old magazines and books falls into a gray area where one is -- in all likelihood -- breaking the letter of the law but generally not its spirit. I accept rationalizations along those lines, just as I can't really fault someone who decided so travel 100Mph through some utterly uninhabited random road in Eastern Oregon. :-) Still, anyone who is hauled into court can't really complain, but personally I'd hope that some lawyer hoping to make an example would choose someone posting to alt.binaries.e-book.technical (where 99% of the posts are clear violations of the letter and spirit of copyright law) rather than the OP. Rationalizations are as diverse and original as fertile minds can create. The ultimate result will be that eventually, nobody will bother creating anything original. Only in some sort of idealist world. In the real world, original creations will be generated so long as doing so puts bread on the table. Would you rather sell 1,000 copies of a 99% copy-proof program at $10,000 each or 1,000,000 copies of a pretty-readily-copyable program at $100 each? Bill Gates clearly prefers the later. As you're probably aware, Don Lancaster makes a good point that the oft-heralded intellectual property protection device of the patent really doesn't do you much good in the real world, at least until you're a very large company. Tektronix seemed to be using this approach decades back when the comprehensive use of T-coils to obtain wider frequency respones was a well-protected inside secret, no? Incidentally, I was told by the ARRL that authors of articles in all their publications are given blanket permission to put a copy of articles they've written on their own web site, with appropriate acknowledgment that the ARRL owns the copyright and reproduction is by permission. That's generous of them. I suppose it is, but these days you can't make any decent money writing for the ARRL or the magazines, and as such publications have to be pretty generous in what they offer because they're effectively asking for significant donations of intellectual property by their authors. ---Joel Kolstad |
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