On 02/10/17 15:51, Yuri wrote:
In addition, hypertext is not a literary work, as it seems to me.
Moreover, it is somehow attracted to the ears, do not you think?
Lawyers told me otherwise:
"A website is copyrighted at the time of development. So putting the
copyright notice on the bottom of a site states that the material
displayed is not to be used without permission of the owner. In fact,
you don’t even need the notice to claim copyright."
"It is also common for the text, HTML, and script elements of a page to
be taken and reused. If you have not gotten permission, you have
violated the owner's copyright."
The legal point is that by adapting the original HTML you are creating a
*derived* HTML document which includes the other copyright contents
contained within the page text without permission from the original
creator - and then distributing it without their permission. That
derivative distribution is what you get in trouble.
Amos
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