On 2008-10-03, greg <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote: > Lawrence D'Oliveiro wrote: >> In message <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>, Steven D'Aprano >> wrote: >> >> > (2) Even when the source is available, it is sometimes a legal trap to >> > read it with respect to patents and copyright. >> >> That's not how patents work. > > I don't think that's how copyrights work either. As far as > I know, whether something is deemed a derivative work is > judged on the basis of how similar it is to another work, > not whether its author had knowledge of the other work. > As long as you express an idea in an original way, it > shouldn't matter where you got the idea from.
IANAL, but IIRC it does matter when it comes to establishing punative damages. If you knowingly and intentionally infringe a patent, I think you're libel for more damages than if you accidentally re-invent something. At least that's what I was told... -- Grant Edwards grante Yow! Thousands of days of at civilians ... have produced visi.com a ... feeling for the aesthetic modules -- -- http://mail.python.org/mailman/listinfo/python-list