On 4/28/2020 3:21 PM, Khaled Omar wrote:
Well, as John Klensin indicated, if the person knew of your work and didn't give you credit, it's certainly rude not to give you credit, but it is not required by the license.
Only rude, what about rights and justice.
That is something you can bring to a patent/intellectual-property lawyer. The IETF does not get in the middle of those sorts of disputes.
But the work is ietf related work, so how it does not get in the middle.
Khaled Omar
IMO - you have no remedy that is available to you by posting to this
list. The IETF is not a party to your issue, even less than an email
provider would be a party if you happened to send an email that was
misused by the receiver. You've been given other suggestions, the most
cogent and applicable of which is "engage a lawyer and take it up with
the entity you believe has wronged you". Perhaps it's time to end
this thread and for you to take responsibility to deal with issues which
you've raised, none of which the IETF is responsible for remediating?
Please listen to what you've been told - that is the reality as we know
it and asking again and again is unlikely to change that reality or the
answers. Persisting is likely to get less and less sympathetic responses.
Later, Mike