On Thu, 14 Aug 2003, John Galt wrote: JG>>JK>On Wed, Aug 13, 2003 at 07:50:32PM +0900, Fedor Zuev wrote: JG>>JK>> According FDL, "You may not use technical measures to JG>>JK>> obstruct or control the reading or further copying of the _copies_ JG>>JK>> _you_ _make_ _or_ _distribute_". You has no obligations regarding JG>>JK>> you own copy of document. You only cannot distribute document and JG>>JK>> limit access to it in the same time. JG>> JG>>JK>However, if you _make_ a copy by using the cp command on your own JG>>JK>system, you are subject to the rule you quoted, and you can't put it on JG>>JK>an encrypted filesystem. JG>> JG>> Again. You demand from licensce to cure a problem, JG>>nonexistent under any jurisdiction I heard about. JG>> JG>> Computer is a single "tangible medium", and any internal JG>>technological process whithin it, you aware or even not aware about JG>>(How about, for example, a dynamic memory regeneration? Hundreds of JG>>thousands copies of RAM per second btw) is completely irrelevant to JG>>the copyright, and, consequently, licences.
JG>_MAI Systems v. Peak Computer_ (991 F.2d 511) says otherwise. To quote AFAIK this case was about loading program from the external storage device. But OK, I can narrow my statement to "your hard drive is a single tangible medium....". JG>>JK>It's also possible to interpret _make_ to cover JG>>JK>a download initiated by you, since a new copy of the program is JG>>JK>certainly being made. JG>> JG>> No. At the moment of download you not have the copy of JG>>licence that shipped with the package. So, you cannot agree or not JG>>agree with this licence to get or not get the right to make copy. JG>>For initial download you anyway need an another source of right. JG>>Distributor consent, usually. Distributor has this right, according JG>>to _his_ copy of licence. And licence do not demand from a JG>>distributor to control medium of downloader`s copy. Licence only JG>>demand not to encrypt work himself. JG>Upon download, a new license gets granted from the FSF to JG>yourself. Given that breaking shrinkwrap can constitute JG>acceptance of a license, it is not that much of a stretch to say JG>that double-clicking or issuing a "get foo" to your download JG>client isn't enough to constitute acceptance of a license. Which license? You find licension in the package, after any download already finished.