A Reductil discount, uthored words are covered by copyright. Correspondence is not covered by copyright. In fact, Kaufen Reductil, if you have letters from an old flame, Buy Reductil no rx, you own all that correspondence, not the person who originally sent it. I left the following comment on Dave Winer's post about Paul Bradshaw's post titled "In the E-mail Era, Reductil online kaufen, Who Owns the Interview?":
"Actually, Wyoming WY Wyo. , email falls under correspondence too, and as such, it's a bit murkier than what you propose regarding copyright above, Reductil for sale. Interviews conducted by email may not be copyrighted in this sense. Old fashioned letters, for example, are the property of the recipient, not of the person who sent them, Reductil discount. Mississippi MS Miss. , When I was studying for my English Studies MA at Illinois State University in the late 90s, we actually discussed how emails, following the format of paper memos and letters, goedkope Reductil apotheek, fell under this "the contents belong to the recipient" rule. Oregon OR Ore. , After all, correspondence doesn't fit under any of the things which copyright is designed to protect: "Copyright, a form of intellectual property law, South Dakota SD , protects original works of authorship including literary, Maine ME Me. , dramatic, musical, and artistic works, Reductil online kopen, such as poetry, Buy Reductil online cheap, novels, movies, songs, cheap Reductil online, computer software, Order Reductil without prescription, and architecture." from http://www.copyright.gov/help/faq/faq-general.h...In an interview, one person (usually the recipient) writes / asks questions, Reductil without prescription, receives answers via correspondence (whether mailed, Cheap Reductil overnight delivery, emailed, or on the phone) from the interviewee, and then takes that information, ordering Reductil no prescription, often reorganizes and edits that information, Vermont VT Vt. , and then authors something from the combined correspondence of the two people. That's not as clear-cut as "the person who wrote the words owns the copyright."
Cheers,
C.K.
I'll add to that comment that this was all still being ironed out when I was taking this class, Kjøp Discount Reductil. Reductil discount, The legalities have changed some since then, I'm sure, and I'm no lawyer. I only bring this up to point out that not everything that a person writes is copyrighted. New Jersey NJ N.J. , A grocery list isn't copyrighted, necessarily, for example, Reductil cheap. A note on the fridge to my wife isn't copyrighted necessarily. Montana MT Mont. , If I begin to assemble these things into a book which I am authoring called "Correspondence with my Wife", even if it never gets published, then it's crossed from correspondence into a creative work that is copyright-able, Osta Reductil. This blog is copyrighted to me, because it's original published writing, Reductil discount. My comment on Dave's blog, Køb discount Reductil, is now part of his blog, so I have granted some of the copyright rights of that original statement to him, have I not, cheap Reductil online cheap, through my actions, and thus I have to link to and quote those words as they appear here.
If I send an email to someone, I am giving that person those words through my actions. I can slap a "this is confidential" bit at the top or bottom of the email to protect it somewhat, but letters and emails can be intercepted, used as evidence in court hearings, referenced, summarized, gossiped (he told me confidentially that x y and z happened), and quoted ad nauseum. The person broadcasting the information may be contractually bound not to share that information. Reductil discount, If the recipient isn't under a similar contract, then there's really nothing legally protecting from that person telling everyone about it (this is why we have NDAs).
As I said in my comment on Winer's blog, this is murky and not nearly as clean-cut as he seems to think. I have no answers to this kerfuffle, which is a word that I learned from Nicole Gustas; she doesn't own the copyright to that word though, so I don't know if I'm attributing it correctly. ;-)
Murky, indeed.
UPDATE: I left another comment on this post, but it's awaiting moderation as I write this. Here's the contents of the post:
"“As a matter of long-established law the writer of a letter holds the copyright to the content” is incorrect. See here: http://query.nytimes.com/gst/abstract.html?res=990DEFD71E38E033A2575BC2A9649D94669FD7CF.There is some protection against publication of letters without the writer’s consent, but as the article notes, “The matter of copyright is not involved at all in the question.” Protection against republication of letters (and thus emails) without consent has more to do with protecting against libel and defamation than anything else.
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