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List: lilypond-user
Subject: Re: Another Lilypond Story
From: "Anthony W. Youngman" <lilypond () thewolery ! demon ! co ! uk>
Date: 2004-12-28 17:51:07
Message-ID: HwOjOhDL0Z0BFwNT () thewolery ! demon ! co ! uk
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In message <200412172023.iBHKNII17296@server2.chocolatelust.com>, James
Moore <banshee@banshee.com> writes
>If you own the copyright on a piece of intellectual property, you have the
>ability to grant a license to use it, in much the same way you can grant
>licenses to use any type of property that you own.
>
>This is from an American point of view - haven't the faintest idea what
>European/Asian/etc concepts look like.
Bearing in mind copyright is governed by the Berne Convention, it's
pretty much the same the world over.
And something which seems to get a heck of a lot of people trying to
grok the GPL (especially over dual-licencing), you need to understand
that it is *impossible* to have both a copyright and a licence to the
same thing.
If I own the copyright to a work, then I do *not* have a licence. If I
have a licence, then obviously I do not own the copyright. Once you've
grasped that fact, licensing should be a lot easier to understand -
failure to grasp that seems to lie behind an awful lot of confusion over
copyright.
Oh - it is possible to have both copyrights in and licences to a work,
but only if it's a composite work, and for each bit of that work you
only have one or the other - let's say three people composited the
parts, one for each instrument, of Poulenc's sonata for trumpet, horn
and trombone. If, as a trombonist, I did the trombone, then I would own
the copyright in the trombone part, and have a licence to the other two
parts (and to the entire work as a whole). But I *don't* have both a
licence and a copyright applying to any single part of the work.
Cheers,
Wol
--
Anthony W. Youngman - wol at thewolery dot demon dot co dot uk
HEX wondered how much he should tell the Wizards. He felt it would not be a
good idea to burden them with too much input. Hex always thought of his reports
as Lies-to-People.
The Science of Discworld : (c) Terry Pratchett 1999
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