This info came just in via the support list (sorry for the full
quote, but I think not everybody is in that list):

On Sat, Jan 04, 2003 at 08:23:13PM -0600, Levey wrote:
I have followed your work for years and occasionally look at your source or
try one of your projects.  I used to mostly use the Online Bible, which you
thanked in your online materials, and now mostly the eSword program.

I was surprised then to find a "hall of shame" on their site listing you
(and eSword) as villains who are stealing their work (
http://www.onlinebible.net/hallofshame.html ).  What gives here?  I thought
you had permission -- or none was needed -- to use their files.  Could you
please comment on this.  They are using strong language towards you: "Sword
Project. Troy blatantly lifted all the material from the Online Bible CD and
then claimed it as public domain. We have a registered copyright with the
Library of Congress which states otherwise. Troy is running a "Bible
Society" founded on stolen material."

Please give me your input on this.  I'm really surprised they have taken
this stance.  So far as I know you do not distribute locked modules and are
not a commercial enterprise.

Thanks.  Paul Levey.
I guess it would be good to react to this _quickly_. Do we still have
a large number of modules created out of OLB sources? These days, most
files seem to be created out of electronic plain texts independent of
OLB, making the claim somewhat pointless. Or might they be referring
to the locked NIV etc. modules?

Greetings,
  Christian

--
[EMAIL PROTECTED] - http://www.web42.com/crenz/ - http://www.web42.com/

"A man who gives in to temptation after five minutes simply does not
know what it would have been like an hour later. That is why bad
people, in one sense, know very little about badness. They have lived
a sheltered life by always giving in."  -- C.S. Lewis

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