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Date:      Fri, 27 Aug 1999 16:46:12 +1000
From:      Steven Honson <shonson@planetquake.com>
To:        freebsd-questions@freebsd.org
Subject:   Re: Making copys of the FreeBSD CD's
Message-ID:  <3.0.5.32.19990827164612.00866830@southcom.com.au>
In-Reply-To: <199908270424.AAA10857@cc942873-a.ewndsr1.nj.home.com>
References:  <37C60CBC.4F5763D4@gorean.org>

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I was planing on making a backup because I use the cd's quite a bit
installing it onto servers at work, and I had quite a lot of trouble
getting a copy of it where i am in the world. I did not realise that I
would be breaching any copyrights by making a backup of a free operating
system.
It looks like I will have to just continue using my original copy and hope
that nothing goes wrong with the cd.
As far as I know I can legaly copy the CD as a backup for myself, well
thats the deal with most other software anyway.
-Steven

At 12:24 AM 8/27/99 -0400, you wrote:
>Doug wrote,
>> Rishikesh wrote:
>> > 
>> > * Greg Lehey (grog@lemis.com) [990826 22:24]:
>> > >
>> > > If you look at the back of the booklet, the last line reads:
>> > >
>> > >   This CDROM copyright (c) 1999 Walnut Creek CDROM
>> > >
>> > > FreeBSD can be freely copied and redistributed.  The CD-ROMs may not,
>> > > and I doubt your motives.  I can't stop you from breaching the
>> > > copyright, but you can be sure as hell I won't help you.
>> > >
>> > > Greg
>> > 
>> >         I wonder what is the difference between the two?
>> 
>> 	It's the difference between content and formatting. To take the argument
>> to the extreme case, you cannot copyright the english alphabet, but people
>> can copyright works that make use of it. It's how the letters are arranged
>> that make the work copyrightable. Same goes with the CD's. All of the
>> content is available for free, but WC Archive puts it together in a handy
>> format for you. That format is copyrightable, and you can't just copy it
>> and use it for your own commercial pursuits. 
>> 
>> Doug (not a lawyer)
>
>I believe you are trying to explain something known as a 'compilation
>copyright.'
>-- 
>Crist J. Clark                           cjclark@home.com
>
>
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---------------------------------------
Steven Honson
Internet Technologist & Consultant
Taroona High School
shonson@hubbub.ths.tased.edu.au


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