You would "stand" about the same place if you took a best seller, or the galleys of an 
upcoming best seller, corrected any typos, rearranged some paragraphs and chapters to 
suite your aesthetic flow and changed some context to make it more in line with how 
you think the story should go.

You would "stand" to get you butt sued off.

Lawrence D. DeVooght
Savant Information Systems
Kenwood, California

Those who cheat time must accept a proportional risk of failure.


-----Original Message-----
From:   Danny Ayers [SMTP:[EMAIL PROTECTED]]
Sent:   Friday, June 11, 1999 7:35 AM
To:     [EMAIL PROTECTED]
Subject:        JESS: License question

Hi,
I'm afraid I'm no good at legal jargon, and I would like to know what
the license/copyright situation is with Jess. The source couldn't be
much more open (ref. the bug fix postings on this group), but the
standard package gives a 'Sandia' ownership message. I am a little
confused - if for example  I was to take the Alpha code, debug it and
remove all copyright notices, then release a commercial product that
incorporated said code, how would I stand legally? (I have no such
intentions BTW). 
If someone could kindly translate this into natural language for me, I
would be most grateful.
Cheers,
Danny.
-- 


Alternate email :
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"one on two and plenty of through"

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