Newsgroups: alt.sources.d Path: utzoo!utgpu!watserv1!watmath!looking!brad From: brad@looking.on.ca (Brad Templeton) Subject: Re: Charging the net.... Organization: Looking Glass Software Ltd. Date: Mon, 22 Apr 91 19:23:06 GMT Message-ID: <1991Apr22.192306.29134@looking.on.ca> References: <1566@tronsbox.xei.com> <1991Apr22.081417@mccall.com> Copyright controls who can copy a file. By posting your message to USENET, you caused it to be copied to the file /u/news/news/admin/12345 (or whatever) on my machine. I can't charge you for that, because when I set up a USENET link I did it aware that people would send files to my machine in this manner without expectation of paying. However, the copyright on your article is still yours. You can put further restrictions on it. You have, implicitly, given me permission to read it -- ie. copy it into my newsreader for formatting, etc. I also have, under copyright law, the right to make archival copies. I own the copy in the news spool directory which you sent to me. But that's it. If I wish to copy it to a disk file, perhaps processing it with uudecode or tar or ZIP or unshar or whatever, I need your permission. This is implicit in most postings of software or binaries to this net. However, not in the case of the shareware. Shareware places explicit limitations on the way you can copy the file. In particular, it says you can copy it only to perform an evaluation, and that use after the evaluation requires a fee. This is my understanding of the law. Copyright law gives the copyright holder complete control over copying of the work, except for archival copies and a number of specific exemptions. The shareware licence is indeed valid. (Some people, oddly enough, have argued that shareware showing up on your machine is unsolicited merchandise -- yours to keep. The file that showed up is indeed yours to keep, but you are not allowed to make further copies or derivative works. If you get an unsolicited book in the mail, it's yours to keep, but you are not allowed to make copies or derivative works) However, this is moot. There are enough enemies of the shareware concept on the net who will ignore the law and say, "You sent it to me, I don't have to pay." It doesn't matter if they are right or wrong, they will do this, and you can't stop them in any convenient way. As such, they have made shareware a non-feasable distribution method on USENET. Too bad, because the grass-roots nature of shareware fits well with the grass-roots nature of usenet, except with those who think it is a sin for programmers to charge for their work. -- Brad Templeton, ClariNet Communications Corp. -- Waterloo, Ontario 519/884-7473