SC - OT: Web copyright -- can Earthlink use my material?
KallipygosRed at aol.com
KallipygosRed at aol.com
Sat Feb 3 19:53:09 PST 2001
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In a message dated 2/3/01 7:28:04 PM US Mountain Standard Time,
rcmann4 at earthlink.net writes:
> Does this mean that they could, say, publish a recipe booklet and leave
> my name off it? Or that they could legally object to my publishing it
> elsewhere?
>
I would not think so, although it appears that what it does do is grant them
permission for useage with attribution. Its hard to say though, because, a
lot of ISPs are now doing things like stating that they have the right to
info that normally you wouldn't think they could touch. Juno's privacy
statement is very invasive to the person. They have right to supply your
marketing info to *anyone* and you have no say in it because you chose their
service voluntairly. I just about had a coronary when I read that.
It appears that ever since the web copyright for intellectual properties has
been retuned, that ISP's are avoiding the situation of copyright violation by
adapting their privacy statments like this. Wave of the future?
Lars
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<HTML><FONT FACE=arial,helvetica><BODY BGCOLOR="#ffffff"><FONT COLOR="#800080" SIZE=3 FAMILY="SERIF" FACE="Collage" LANG="0">In a message dated 2/3/01 7:28:04 PM US Mountain Standard Time,
<BR>rcmann4 at earthlink.net writes:
<BR>
<BR></FONT></FONT><FONT COLOR="#7d025b" SIZE=2 FAMILY="SANSSERIF" FACE="Arial" LANG="0">
<BR><BLOCKQUOTE TYPE=CITE style="BORDER-LEFT: #0000ff 2px solid; MARGIN-LEFT: 5px; MARGIN-RIGHT: 0px; PADDING-LEFT: 5px">Does this mean that they could, say, publish a recipe booklet and leave
<BR>my name off it? Or that they could legally object to my publishing it
<BR>elsewhere?
<BR></FONT><FONT COLOR="#7d025b" SIZE=3 FAMILY="SANSSERIF" FACE="Arial" LANG="0"></BLOCKQUOTE>
<BR></FONT></FONT><FONT COLOR="#800080" SIZE=3 FAMILY="SERIF" FACE="Collage" LANG="0">
<BR>I would not think so, although it appears that what it does do is grant them
<BR>permission for useage with attribution. Its hard to say though, because, a
<BR>lot of ISPs are now doing things like stating that they have the right to
<BR>info that normally you wouldn't think they could touch. Juno's privacy
<BR>statement is very invasive to the person. They have right to supply your
<BR>marketing info to *anyone* and you have no say in it because you chose their
<BR>service voluntairly. I just about had a coronary when I read that.
<BR>
<BR>It appears that ever since the web copyright for intellectual properties has
<BR>been retuned, that ISP's are avoiding the situation of copyright violation by
<BR>adapting their privacy statments like this. Wave of the future?
<BR>
<BR>Lars</FONT></HTML>
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