On Thu, Apr 15, 2010 at 10:27 AM, Otto Moerbeek <o...@drijf.net> wrote:
> > > You do not seem to understand how copyright works. When published, a > work is subject to a set of restrictions, laid down by copyright law. > A license grants rights (under conditions or restrictions) to the > receiver of a work. No license means no extra rights, which means the > default defined by copyright law applies. If you want to publish a > work as public domain, you must include a license saying so. > > -Otto > Now this is interesting... Does anything supersede Copyright Law? What if I release my work as Anonymous with no text in regards to licensing? Does anyone wanting to use that work in OpenBSD actually have to track down who "Anonymous" was? Does the code become useless if its ownership cannot be transferred? In other words.. is there no such thing as genuine "public domain"?