>>>>> "Sergio" == Sergio Brandano <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> writes:
Sergio> I am tired of all these messages! Stop posting! You continue to disagree with us. We could either ignore you or continue the discussion. Since you have not convinced us that you are right nor have we fould an acceptable compromise it seems that continuing this discussion is in your interest. If you would rather we shut up and pretend you had never made your request, we would be happy to do that. >> Huh? You retain copyright to your postings that you >> contribute, just as with any code you contribute. It's NOT >> "(c) Debian". Nobody is claiming that you have lost any rights >> to republish as you like. It's your work. Sergio> I see that there are still some people who keep missing Sergio> the point here. Sergio> You have to understand that no person or institute owns Sergio> your copyright if you do not transfer the ownership in Sergio> writing via a legal document! Even if this were true, which it is not (the document doesn't have to be written/signed) in some cases), but no one here claims you have transferred your copyright. People claim you have given a limted grant of some of your exclusive rights to those people you sent your mail to. People claim that this grant is implicit in the transmission of mail to a mailing list by someone authorized to make such a grant. Clearly you are authorized to make such a grant; you are the copyright holder. The questions that are worth discussing seem to be whether such a grant was made and what the extent of the grant is. Sergio> By posting these recent Sergio> messages, for example, I have just exerted my right to Sergio> express Sergio> my opinion, by posting to a restricted number of Sergio> people, on channels that are not under the copyright of Sergio> Debian. As such, this very mail, for example is still my Sergio> mail, and Debian *can not* and *must not* archive it! Are Sergio> we speaking the same language? Sergio> is the privacy? What sort of community is this one? Debian believes that you have expressed your opinion by posting to a public channel (debian-legal and debian-www) and have authorized Debian to send a copy to the subscribers of those channels and to anyone who may at some future point look at our list archives. Note that you have not sent the message to debian-legal's subscribers; Debian did that at your request. Instead, you sent the message to Debian, and by addressing it to debian-legal you requested Debian's computers to forward the message to current subscribers of debian-legal and to the list archive for debian-legal. You may have a claim that in the past you did not intend to have your messages archived and that Debian could not reasonably assume they had a limited grant of rights that allowed them to archive your messages. However, since you have continued to send to debian-legal after you learned that list was archived, knowing that by doing so your message would be archived, you cannot reasonably claim that you did not intend to grant Debian the limited rights necessary to perform the archiving. It is like talking to Sergio> friends for years, and suddenly discover that they have Sergio> been recording you! Not only this, but they have been also Sergio> duplicating and indexing via commercial institutes! Where Sergio> The reason why I am doing it also another one. I am tired Sergio> of seeing pages of links to my past emails, every time I Sergio> type my name on a main search site! The copyright issue is Unclear. Under US law (and the webserver for the archives is I believe in the US), you may not be able to revoke a limited grant of rights you made when you submitted the message to the archive. The only way you can know for certain is to test in court. Sergio> the only instrument I have to cut them out for good. I Sergio> did not transfer to Debian the right to archive my mail, Sergio> and I want this mail to be deleted for good. It is my Sergio> right! Sergio> There is of course a more general problem too. By letting Sergio> the main search sites to link all the emails of these Sergio> lists, we are overloading the net! I understand that those Sergio> mail may be important for some people in Debian, but it is Sergio> not reasonable to make world class lists of them, just Sergio> because of these few people! Incidentally, these few Sergio> people O, I sometimes use the main search sites. I might for example want to look at all your archived mail to find out if you were a reasonable person to work with on a project. If so, I would certainly want to look at all your mail, not just Debian mail. I might want to find all mail on some topic and I wouldn't care if it was on a Debian server or somewhere else. In such cases, I would tend to use Google. If I want to look for something on a Debian server, I might still use Google because it is faster than the Debian search page.