>> Sure, any Derivative Database that is made available to a 3rd party falls >> under the share-alike. No doubt about that. This handled in section 4.4. >> The >> exceptions are handled in the following section 4.5. >> >> In case of "your" Produced Work, you make the Produced Work available to >> a >> 3rd party and not the Derived Database on which the Produced Work is >> based. > >This constitutes a "public use" of the derived database and triggers >share-alike for the derived database. There is no exception. >
The Derivate Database for the Produced Work is considered non-existing because of 4.5. Otherwise the introduction of a "Produced Work" becomes irrelevant and a "Produced Work" could be considered as a database. For everything else the Collected Database definition would sufficient ("assembled into a collective whole"). Regards, Oliver -- View this message in context: http://gis.638310.n2.nabble.com/OSM-legal-talk-public-transport-routing-and-OSM-ODbL-tp5265671p5269102.html Sent from the Legal Talk mailing list archive at Nabble.com. _______________________________________________ legal-talk mailing list legal-talk@openstreetmap.org http://lists.openstreetmap.org/listinfo/legal-talk