Alexander Terekhov <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> writes: > Martin Dickopp wrote: > [...] >> I have no idea what you're aiming at. > > I'm not surprised.
Since it becomes subsequently clear that you have no idea what you are aiming at either, hardly a surprise. >> If the works of A and B are combined to form a derivative work by >> an entity C, and the act of > > Combined as in what? Can you print two different stories (bought > electronically) on the same sheet of paper (to form a combined > printout) or not? That certainly falls under fair use _unless_ you choose to redistribute them again. For that you need a licence. > Printing them in one pass is certainly illegal in the GNU > Republic... Nonsense. It just does not give you a licence to redistribute. > unless you happen to be entitled with a privilege to prepare > derivative works of both and they both came to you under > "compatible" licenses, right? Preparing derivative works is pretty much your right. Redistributing them isn't. Redistribution is illegal unless you have a licence to do so. The GPL is a blanket licence for redistribution of the GPLed work. However, it demands no additional restrictions. If the other material on the page has an incompatible licence and one can't cleanly separate the parts into on the page into separate components, the whole is a derivative work and can only be distributed as a whole under the GPL or not at all. It is not that hard to understand. -- David Kastrup, Kriemhildstr. 15, 44793 Bochum _______________________________________________ Gnu-misc-discuss mailing list [email protected] http://lists.gnu.org/mailman/listinfo/gnu-misc-discuss
