On Fri, 25 Apr 2008, Greg Hellings wrote: > Your understanding is, I believe, slightly flawed. There is a > separate part of the copyright laws which allows for someone who made > a major effort to transform a document (I know translation is covered, > and I would imagine that paper->digital conversion is also covered) > may copyright that transformation.
I'm not sure if you're right about this. I haven't read the US copyright law but the Finnish law, and it gives a real copyright (author's right) for a translation. Copyright/autor's right is for "creative work", not for mechanical work. Finland follows the Berne conventions and other international conventions. There is nothing about transformation, the closest one is the database right. It is surprisingly difficult to find information about this by googling, all I could find was "Workshop on Electronic Text--Session VI" which states that "An enchanced electronic copy of a print copy ... is not copyrightable." This is quite important topic because there might be a fair amount of material for us to use if electronic resources can not be under copyright or some other right by just being transformed. Yours, Eeli Kaikkonen (Mr.), Oulu, Finland e-mail: [EMAIL PROTECTED] (with no x) _______________________________________________ sword-devel mailing list: sword-devel@crosswire.org http://www.crosswire.org/mailman/listinfo/sword-devel Instructions to unsubscribe/change your settings at above page