Aymeric Mansoux on Tue, 22 Nov 2011 04:26:46 +0100 (CET) |
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Re: <nettime> My Lawyer is an Artist |
Rob Myers said : > On 17/11/11 01:24, Heiko Recktenwald wrote: > > I would make a difference between the relation between creator A and > > user B and the relation between user B and C. > > > > Even if creator A would OWE something to user B, he would owe nothing > > to user C. > > B owes something to C, though, and B got it from A. A cannot change B's > ability to give A's work to C. What A "owes" C depends on how > Romantically we view A's work. But C will certainly end up with A's work. <...> Just to add to what Rob and the others have already said, I think there is also a confusion between copyright, moral rights and the effectiveness of the latter within copyleft practices. In theory A can still stop C to keep on making a particular usage of A's work if there is a way to demonstrate that this particular usage, even though fully respecting the terms of the license, is damaging for A's honor and reputation. That's the simplified general idea. In practice every juridiction has its own way to define moral rights and by extension its own cases of what is considered "damaging". To make things worse the very concept of moral rights does not exist in all juridictions. Overall, whether it is defined or not, the whole idea is difficult to put in practice, if not hard to make relevant to a specific context. In the end, this only concerns very specific situations that will only change the nature and possibly terminate the license or the contract between A and C. B's rights will remain unchanged, as well as the ones from D, E, F, ..., Z because free culture licenses are irrevocable. The GPLv3 and CC licenses are very explicit in that regard. A good illustration of the difficulty to deal with moral right issues is by checking all the mechanisms in CC licenses to make sure A is not wrongly credited for changes that were not endorsed. So, as stated previously, once the decision is made, is public and that the licensed work has been already copied/distributed, there is no turning back. a. -- http://su.kuri.mu # distributed via <nettime>: no commercial use without permission # <nettime> is a moderated mailing list for net criticism, # collaborative text filtering and cultural politics of the nets # more info: http://mx.kein.org/mailman/listinfo/nettime-l # archive: http://www.nettime.org contact: nettime@kein.org