Reading through the rules printing a map on a catalog is as I understood it and as long as we stay in the printed area it seems fairly clear.
However it would seem there are some restrictions on what can be done with the data which I hadn't fully appreciated until rereading your links and probably explains why Bing just puts an OSM display as an option. For example mixing other data in with an OSM map to produce a composite map might be a problem area and that may have some implications for me. Anyway for the moment the printed map side is clear and as I understood. I think we can safely say that sorting out the electronic side can be ignored for now. I really should get out of the habit of putting different ideas together in a complex way and thinking of future implications. Thanks for your input. Cheerio John On 26 November 2010 07:30, Richard Weait <[email protected]> wrote: > On Fri, Nov 26, 2010 at 7:08 AM, john whelan <[email protected]> > wrote: > > Having fewer mappers per square kilometre I work with a lot of CANVEC > data > > and it would be nice to feed back the occasional new road, or the fact > that > > a wooded area now has houses on to them which I don't think I can do > under > > the current licensing scheme. CANVEC is Canadian government so in an odd > > way I own it. > > This seems to be a different question than the one you posted at the > beginning of this thread. > > Are you confident that you now understand what your obligations are > when including an OSM map in a catalog? > > _______________________________________________ > newbies mailing list > [email protected] > http://lists.openstreetmap.org/listinfo/newbies >
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