On Tuesday 22 June 2004 2:41 am, Joseph A. Nagy, Jr. wrote: > On Tue, Jun 22, 2004 at 03:30:19AM +0200, Damjan wrote the following: > > > However you cannot: > > > > > > - directly use the virus databases > > > > How come? > > As far as I know, copyright law doesn't protect databases. > > You haven't been keeping up. Congress is pushing really hard (if they > haven't already passed it) for a law that would indeed copyright databases > with protections far exceeding those of normal copyrights (e.g. no fair use > clause).
In the UK there is separate protection (called "Database Rights") for owners of databases, irrespective of whether they hold copyright in the information contained within the database itself. People have been successfully sued in court for infringement of others' database rights, for taking information (which was publicly accessible from elsewhere) and reproducing it in a useful / searchable / indexed format, because they took it from a source which put the time & effort into organising / indexing the data (which is where the database rights come in). So, the virus definitions could quite easily be covered under two protective mechanisms - simple copyright for the information itself (each signature, for example, and the names ClamAV uses for the viruses), and database rights for the organisation and structure of it. Regards, Antony. -- Success is a lousy teacher. It seduces smart people into thinking they can't lose. - William H Gates III Please reply to the list; please don't CC me. ------------------------------------------------------- This SF.Net email sponsored by Black Hat Briefings & Training. Attend Black Hat Briefings & Training, Las Vegas July 24-29 - digital self defense, top technical experts, no vendor pitches, unmatched networking opportunities. Visit www.blackhat.com _______________________________________________ Clamav-users mailing list [EMAIL PROTECTED] https://lists.sourceforge.net/lists/listinfo/clamav-users