Showing posts with label copyright. Show all posts
Showing posts with label copyright. Show all posts

28 June 2012

Cyclical Resources

Resources for e-Sword appear, and occasionally disappear. The NA-26, and its relatives (NA-27, USB3, USB4, BHS) are probably the best known resources that make a reappearance, only to disappear again.

None of those e-Sword resources contains a fraction of the information that is available in the hard copy.  AFAIK, there is no group of resources in the e-Sword world, that comes close to containing the data in the hardcopy of those books.  Nonetheless, some users find those resources useful.

About a week ago, a question about the copyright status of NA-26 was raised on BibleSupport.com.  (That thread has since been deleted.) 

The specific question was
(2) To observe any special restrictions that may govern the use of particular texts or bodies of material as stipulated in the aforementioned documentation;
Doesn't this mean that even if you are not distributing it for commercial purposes (which is discussed in point one of the CCAT user agreement), this text might still be restricted?
 Copyright and licensing issues can be extremely thorny. The individual simply wants assurance that their use of NA-26 is legal.

In the United States, copyright law, at least in theory, covers distribution.  It does not cover usage.  How the content was originally obtained is basically irrelevant--- a point that a number of former habituates of Cellophane Square greatly appreciated, especially when the police tried to confiscate their newly purchased albums.

In other countries, copyright law can extend into how the content was obtained.

For all five resources (NA-26, NA-27, USB3, USB4, BHS), CCAT is the acknowledged source of the etext. This is where things start to get legally confusing, and tricky.

  • The University of Pennsylvania had a license from The German Bible Society to use those texts in their CCAT project;
  • CCAT distributed a number of texts under a license that restricted usage to academic research;
  • CCAT put some texts online, with their own license, which prohibited commercial usage, and restricted non-academic research usage;
  • CCAT removed the texts licensed from The German Bible Society from their online site, citing a license misunderstanding, demuring from clarifying what is meant, or being referred to;
  • The German Bible Society announces that they will not grant permission to distribute their content to any free Bible software.  A clarification from them implies that both gratis and libre software are included the prohibition;
  • e-Sword-users.org put the e-Sword resources online, removed them, and puts them back up.  The specific resources imply that users have to sign, and adhere to the CCAT license.
Furthermore:
  • The German Bible Society has never granted anybody associated with e-Sword permission to distribute their content;
  • The intent of the CCAT License is to prohibit mass re-distribution;
Consequently, the odds are that the e-Sword resources were never legally distributed.

One of the first response to the question was that the Bible should not be subject to copyright, because God wrote it.  Most courts in the United States would dismiss it out of hand, citing Urantia Foundation v. Maaherra, 895 F. Supp. 1329 - Dist. Court, D. Arizona 1995.  In the South, the court might declare that since this involves God, then it is a matter of religion.  Something that the court frequently tried to do in 
McMurtry v. Society Ordo Templi Orientis Case # 85-2897 US Court of Appeals, Ninth District. 819 F 2d 1146, and the rest of the lawsuits involving those two organizations.

A more pertinent question is what does The German Bible Society hold a copyright of? Their content comprises of a synthetic text. A text that they believe accurately represents what was originally written. A text that does not reflect any specific extent manuscript.

As far as current scholarship is concerned, we do not have holographic texts written by the authors of either the Tanakh, or the New Testament. What we do have, is texts that are copies, with errors, of what was originally written.  The original text is in the public domain.  A specific edition might be under copyright, depending upon the degree of "creativity" that is involved in deciphering the specific manuscript that the edition represents. 

One of the respondents on that thread pointed out that The German Bible Society had neither submitted a DMCA take down notice, nor filed a lawsuit, and hence the distribution must be legal. After all, they reasoned, a year is long enough to take such action.  

DMCA take down notices are fairly easy to file. (Disclaimer: I've probably filed half a dozen since 2000.  I've also been the recipient of about the same number.  Only one went to court, and that case was dismissed with prejudice, because it involved deep links, which the court ruled did not violate copyright.)

From both a financial and public relations point of view, filing lawsuits is a bad practice. 
  • Juries can be finicky.; 
  • Judges can rule against a party, simply because the lawyer angers the judge;
  • Expert witnesses can be challenged, with the court ruling that they are not qualified to give testimony in their alleged area of expertise;
  • Other things can go wrong;
In a theoretical copyright infringement lawsuit in the United States, involving NA-26, there would be reams of technical testimony, showing how and why each word was used in that work, and how it is, or is not a deviation from other texts. The main point being how it conforms to the criteria laid out under US Copyright law, that makes it a copyrightable work.
 
In the United States, "sweat of the brow" does not automatically mean "copyrightable".  In Europe, "sweat of the brow" implies "copyrightable".  

If the theoretical lawsuit were in Europe, an alleged infringer in the United States would ignore it, due to lack of jurisdiction.  Likewise, a European court would ignore any rulings made in the United States, due to lack of jurisdiction.



I am not a lawyer.  This is not legal advice.



04 June 2011

Copyright issues

Poland:  No content that originates from Poland can be accepted.

Portugal:  If the proposed law passes, all content that originates from Portugal has to be rejected.

This rejection is simply because the law prohibits content creators from distributing their content gratis. e-Sword, amongst other Bible Study programs, was created with the idea that content would also be distributed gratis.

03 May 2011

An in-house lawyer

At times, having in-house counsel is very useful.

As a thought experiment, I considered what the requirements of an in-house lawyer for The e-Sword Users Foundation would be.

Given the global presence of e-Sword, the lawyer would need to know the fundamentals of:
  • Continental European law;
  • British Common Law;
  • US Statute Law, Case Law, and Constitutional Law;
  • Code Napoleon;
  • Roman Dutch Law;
  • Hispanic Law;
  • Indian Law;
  • Chinese Law;
  • Japanese Law;
  • Canon Law;
  • Shari'a & Fiqh;
  • Halakha;
Their first speciality would be copyright law.
Their second speciality would be non-profit law;
Their third speciality would be tax-exempt law;
Their fourth speciality would be patent law;

I'm not sure which part of the educational process would be easier:
  • Learning the ins and outs of those legal systems;
  • Learning the ins and outs of copyright law;
  • Learning the ins and outs of tax-exempt law;
  • Learning the ins and outs of non-profit law;
  • Learning the ins and outs of patent law;

Obviously I am looking for SuperLawyer.

08 April 2009

My e-Sword Documentation

In rewriting/updating the documentation for both e-Sword, and Pocket e-Sword,I've come across too many unacceptable errors. As a consequence, I have pulled all of the documentation for e-Sword and Pocket e-Sword from my esnips folder.

For all practical purposes, I am completely rewriting The e-Sword Utility Program FAQ. I don't know how long it will take.


On a semi-related note, I've submitted DMCA take down notices to several sites that contain material that I have written. In all cases, it is because the sites in question are distributing the material in violation of the license that my material was distributed under.

19 February 2009

e-Sword Documentation

Right now, I'm torn between removing all of the e-Sword documentation I've written, and leaving it up. I am also torn between publishing documentation that I write in the future, or keeping it for my own use.

I would have thought that a group that uses the GNU GPL 2.0 license would both know, and understand the difference between closed source, and open source. I would also have thought that they would respect copyright law. It appears that I was wrong on both counts.


I've had some misgivings in the past about providing information about e-Sword. That a group that theoretically understands Open Source doesn't understand it, implies that my misgivings were justified.


Maybe I should have volunteered to talk about copyright, licenses, and similar things at BibleTech 2009.

20 December 2008

The Copyright Table

Copyright Table

I proposed this table for two reasons:

  • To facilitate bibliographic citation of e Sword resources;
  • To provide a way to easily determine the copyright status of a resource;


This table is automatically created by BeST 2.0. Other utility programs may also create it.


  • This table is not part of the official specification;
  • Inclusion of this table is optional;



  • All of this data can be included in the Description field of the Details Table;
  • Only user created e Sword resources currently contain this table;
  • BeST is the only tool that currently generates this table;
  • Both Text2DAO and TheWORDpad Editor enable one to read, or edit this table, if it is present in the resource.
  • e Sword Resourcer is the only tool that currently reads/utilizes this table;


By definition, the following record numbers are reserved:

  • Record 0: The tool that created the resource;

  • Record 1: The first edition hard copy;

  • Record 2: The edition that was used as the source text;

  • Record 3: Electronic text copyright information;

  • Record 4: e Sword module copyright information;

  • Record 5 and higher: Changes to the module;


In practice, those specifications are not always strictly adhered to. :(

In the following database, fields are rows, not columns1.

Field Name

Contents

What

Description

Type

ID

1

Record Number

Internal Tracking number

Autonumber

Author

Jonathon Blake

Display name of the author

Name of the author/editor/transcriber of the material.

Text

Title

The

e Sword Utility Program FAQ

Display title of the material.

Title of the material.

Text

Place

Seattle WA

Display place of publication.

Place of publication. For material that originally appeared on the Internet, the URL is to be listed.

Text

Publisher

Author

Display name of publisher.

Name of the publisher

Text

Year

2005 2006

Display year of publication

Year of publication

Text

Edition

0.0.68.0

Edition that the module is of

Edition or Version information.

Text

Copyright

Creative Commons Deed Attribution Non Commercial Share Alike 2.0

Display Copyright Status or License

License or Copyright status of the format.

Memo

Notes

Send a letter to Creative Commons, 543 Howard Street, 5th Floor, San Francisco, California, 94105, USA requesting a copy of the legal code.

Notes about the text/edition/format

Notes related to the resource. Examples include:

Terms of the license,

Copy of the permission to distribute,

Changes made in the resource;

Memo

Table 3: Copyright

1There are too many fields to have them all displayed in one row.