On Thu, Nov 04, 1999 at 01:41:19PM -0500, Raul Miller wrote: > For the case of U.S. copyright law dynamic linking not explicitly provided > for in the license is a fair use issue, not a "this isn't covered by > copyright law" issue.
I know nothing of US copyright law except that it and Finnish copyright law are based on the same international treaty (the Berne convention). As I understand it, fair use cannot *ever* be a candidate in this situation: fair use it about allowing scholarly citation, commentary and learning. Dynamic linking is none of these things. Fair use is covered in the Copyright Myths FAQ. Here's an excerpt: The "fair use" exemption to copyright law was created to allow things such as commentary, parody, news reporting, research and education about copyrighted works without the permission of the author. Intent, and damage to the commercial value of the work are important considerations. Are you reproducing an article from the New York Times because you needed to in order to criticise the quality of the New York Times, or because you couldn't find time to write your own story, or didn't want your readers to have to pay to log onto the online services with the story or buy a copy of the paper? The former is probably fair use, the latter probably aren't. -- %%% Antti-Juhani Kaijanaho % [EMAIL PROTECTED] % http://www.iki.fi/gaia/ %%% "" (John Cage)