Sebastian Wangnick schrieb:
So the "Recht auf das wissenschaftliche Kleinzitat" allows a European
author
to "quote" small portions of e.g. GPL code without asking the author for
permissions. The European "Urheberrecht" on the other side forbids a
minor
contributor to govern the license for the project that makes use of the
"Recht auf das wissenschaftliche Kleinzitat".
I'm not sure whether his conclusion is complete. According to
http://www.sakowski.de/skripte/urheber2.html, citing is not allowed to replace (only to
illustrate or backup) own statements of the author. I would therefore presume that whilst
"quoting" GPL code, e.g., in a comment, to illustrate ones own approach might
be OK, using GPL code as a mandatory element in the software would not be OK. But I am
not a lawyer ...
You are essentially right: In german Urheberrecht, § 51 UrhG allows for
citing works as far as necessary for the purpose of the citation.
Replacing own work isn't among the legal purposes for a citation. See
Wandtke/Bullinger, UrhG, § 51 Rn. 2.
But you should consider too that trivial works are not protectable in
german law. A program needs to express some kind of choice between
different approaches to a problem, instead of simply following technical
necessities. See Wandtke/Bullinger, § 69a Rn. 34/35. As far as I
understand part of the argument with Mr. Schily is about Makefiles,
these might be trivial (I'm no programmer).
Michael Below
--
Michael Below
Rechtsanwalt
www.judiz.de
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