On 11/28/2015 3:41 PM, Mouse wrote:
Love that term, "bounce buffer" (I wrote a whole package to support
them in a packet switch I did) - I'm officially adopting it, right
now! :-)
Hey - anything that anyone writes is automatically copyrighted.
I realize you...may have been less than entirely serious.  But what you
wrote could easily be taken seriously, especially by someone only
partially inside our culture.  So I'm going to be a minor killjoy here.

Yes, anything written now is automatically copyrighted in most
jursidctions.  But (a) the term "bounce buffer" is small enough and
obvious enough it probably cannot be copyrighted on its own (and is not
infringing when copied in isolation), (b) was quite possibly published
without copyright claim before automatic copyright and is thus in the
public domain now, and (c) is of uncertain authorship anyway.  So...

So first you need permission to use that!
...you actually don't.

/~\ The ASCII                             Mouse
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Further to this discussion on 'automatic' copyright. That only came into being in 1989 - prior to that ALL documents had to have either the symbol (c) or the word COPYRIGHT as well as the name of the person or organization on the document (if a single page) or the front page or the index page. This was true for the period prior to 1978, however during the period 1978 through 1989 you had up to five years to copyright the document, otherwise it passed into public domain.

https://copyright.cornell.edu/resources/publicdomain.cfm

One could trademark an expression 'bounce buffer', however as Mouse points out you can't exactly copyright it.

John :-#)#

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