Re: [OSM-legal-talk] Legal or not? user srpskicrv and source = TOPO 25 VGI BEOGRAD

2010-10-10 Thread Ulf Möller

Am 02.10.2010 14:36, schrieb Valent Turkovic:


Here is his answer:



Those countries have their own geogrphical or geodesist institutes. So:
the VGI is selling those OLD prints and they have still an copyright on
reproduction of those papers, BUT NOT THE CONTAINED DATA !!!


The fact that the new countries have institutes that create their own 
maps has nothing to do with the copyright on existing VGI map data. (Map 
making is not exclusively a government task, as anyone working on OSM 
should know.)


There are only two possibilites: Either VGI still owns the rights to the 
maps they created, or the rights were transferred to the new countries. 
In either case, you cannot use the data without permission.



I agree that it is a grey zone, but who will say that its illegal?


OSM doesn't accept data from grey zones


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Re: [OSM-legal-talk] Legal or not? user srpskicrv and source = TOPO 25 VGI BEOGRAD

2010-10-10 Thread Anthony
On Sun, Oct 10, 2010 at 4:51 AM, Ulf Möller o...@ulfm.de wrote:
 Am 02.10.2010 14:36, schrieb Valent Turkovic:
 I agree that it is a grey zone, but who will say that its illegal?

 OSM doesn't accept data from grey zones

It'll be interesting to see how the ODbL switchover takes place, then.

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Re: [OSM-legal-talk] Legal or not? user srpskicrv and source = TOPO 25 VGI BEOGRAD

2010-10-07 Thread jamesmikedup...@googlemail.com
On Thu, Oct 7, 2010 at 8:57 AM, Valent Turkovic
valent.turko...@gmail.com wrote:
 On Mon, 04 Oct 2010 08:21:12 +0200,
 jamesmikedup...@googlemail.com wrote:

 Just an observation :
 These maps look just like if not identical to the russian topographical
 maps. mike

 Are russian topographical maps free usable with OSM?

that is another contentious issue, they are defactor public domain IMHO.
mike

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Re: [OSM-legal-talk] Legal or not? user srpskicrv and source = TOPO 25 VGI BEOGRAD

2010-10-07 Thread Michael Barabanov
On Thu, Oct 7, 2010 at 12:09 AM, jamesmikedup...@googlemail.com 
jamesmikedup...@googlemail.com wrote:


 that is another contentious issue, they are defactor public domain IMHO.
 mike

 AFAIK, not in Russia.
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Re: [OSM-legal-talk] Legal or not? user srpskicrv and source = TOPO 25 VGI BEOGRAD

2010-10-04 Thread jamesmikedup...@googlemail.com
Just an observation :
These maps look just like if not identical to the russian topographical maps.
mike

On Mon, Oct 4, 2010 at 12:26 AM, Matija Nalis mnalis-n...@voyager.hr wrote:
 On Sun, 3 Oct 2010 09:41:00 +0100, Francis Davey fjm...@gmail.com wrote:
 On 2 October 2010 23:29,  ed...@billiau.net wrote:
 The argument is really
 'Is the Serbian government the legal successor of the Yugoslav government
 in Serbian territories?'

 If (say) Serbia were to use OSMF or an OSM user in London, the local
 court would have to decide whether - as a matter of UK copyright law -
 Serbia were entitled to a copyright in the maps/data/whatever and if
 so whether it could be enforced. The Berne Convention requires that we
 afford the same protection to foreign copyrights as we do our own, so
 a court in England might well decide that Serbia could enforce these
 copyrights. Ditto pretty much any court in any country that was a
 signatory to the Convention.

 Of course there are massive caveats here: there might be no copyright
 in the data;

 Well, ex-Yugoslavia (as well as todays Serbia) were/are both Berne
 convention signatories.  The maps in question are from 1970s it seems,
 and copyright in YU was 70 years AFAIR at the time the YU falled.

 So all singnatories to Berne convention should be still protecting that
 works. Now, if I understand you correctly, you propose 2 scenarions:

 a) if it is likely that Serbia is successor to Yugoslavia, that the
   maps in question are still protected (unless Serbia relinquieshed
   copyright on them, which AFAIK it didn't), or

 b) if the Serbia is not successor to Yugoslavia (at least in the matter of
   aforementioned copyright on maps), than that maps may be out of
   copyright.

 While I agree with (a), the (b) does not seem right to me. IMHO, if Serbia
 is not accepted as successor to Yugoslavia (and the matter was not resolved
 by succession), then the copyright owner is missing - and should behave
 like any other case of missing or unknown copyright owner (for example, if
 author without successors died; or if the work was under pseudonym and never
 reveled).

 And that behaviour is, to the best of my knowledge, that the copyright work
 remains protected with all rights reserved (only practical difference
 being that potential users now have 0% chance of buying rights from owner
 anymore, as she's gone). (At least it looks so in Croatian copyright law
 which is mostly the same as the ex-Yugoslav/Serbian one. Are you perhaps
 arguing that under UK law if the copyright owner is not known or is not
 proactively suing copyright breakers, one can legaly copy copyrighted works,
 and is not in vioalation until he receives and ignores cease and desist
 letter ?)

 no-one might bother to sue anyway (I've no idea how
 aggressively Serbia would try to enforce rights it believed it had).

 Uh, that one (are the chances we won't be caught breaking law low enough
 today?) should not be the way to handle this (or similar) issues, IMHO.

 Unauthorized copying of copyrighted works is illegal. The possibly high
 chances that copyright owners might not notice or might not be bothered
 to sue ATM does not make it legal.


 --
 Opinions above are GNU-copylefted.


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Re: [OSM-legal-talk] Legal or not? user srpskicrv and source = TOPO 25 VGI BEOGRAD

2010-10-03 Thread Frederik Ramm

Hi,

On 10/03/2010 04:31 AM, John Smith wrote:

None of those examples applies since it was a question about copyright
ownership.


I don't see why we should treat a nation state's laws about copyright 
any different than a nation state's idiosyncratic laws about maps or 
surveying. If you are in Serbia and violate their copyright you'll end 
up being questioned by the authorities just as if you caught making a 
map in China.


Of course you're welcome to try out for yourself whether or not these 
examples apply.


Bye
Frederik

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Re: [OSM-legal-talk] Legal or not? user srpskicrv and source = TOPO 25 VGI BEOGRAD

2010-10-03 Thread Francis Davey
On 2 October 2010 23:29,  ed...@billiau.net wrote:
 I think that the argument is not that.
 The argument is really
 'Is the Serbian government the legal successor of the Yugoslav government
 in Serbian territories?'
 Would an international court give the rights to the Serbian government?
 I think that there is a possibility either way - that the copyright could
 have expired with the dissolution of the Yugoslav government - or - that
 on Serbian territory the rights to Yugoslav government went to Serbia.

I'm not sure that is the right question and, to that extent, I suspect
that much of this conversation is a red herring (although it may be
interesting). In particular I doubt there is any truly international
court which would have any jurisdiction that was in any useful way
binding on national courts.

If (say) Serbia were to use OSMF or an OSM user in London, the local
court would have to decide whether - as a matter of UK copyright law -
Serbia were entitled to a copyright in the maps/data/whatever and if
so whether it could be enforced. The Berne Convention requires that we
afford the same protection to foreign copyrights as we do our own, so
a court in England might well decide that Serbia could enforce these
copyrights. Ditto pretty much any court in any country that was a
signatory to the Convention.

Of course there are massive caveats here: there might be no copyright
in the data; no-one might bother to sue anyway (I've no idea how
aggressively Serbia would try to enforce rights it believed it had).
I'm just looking at the specific question of Serbia.

As far as I know no-one has objected to either the Federal Republic of
Yugoslavia's declaration of succession to the Berne Convention in June
2001 or Serbia's declaration of continuation in September 2006, but I
rarely have to deal with this kind of cross-border issue in my work,
so I haven't looked into the question thoroughly.

A final note: the fact that the maps are *of* a country other than
Serbia has no relevance whatsoever to the general question of
copyright ownership. Countries do not own data about their geography
under the Berne Convention or any WIPO treaty.

It may be that the law of Yugoslavia did contain such a restriction.
If that is so, I don't know about it.

-- 
Francis Davey

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Re: [OSM-legal-talk] Legal or not? user srpskicrv and source = TOPO 25 VGI BEOGRAD

2010-10-03 Thread Matija Nalis
On Sat, 02 Oct 2010 17:48:39 +0200, Frederik Ramm frede...@remote.org wrote:
 Hi,

 On 10/02/2010 03:43 PM, Ed Avis wrote:
 This is pretty clear, then: OSM also needs to be usable on Serbian territory,
 so it can't use the maps.

 Right... and OSM needs to be usable in India too, so it must show 
 Kashmir as belonging to India as it would otherwise be illegal. And of 
 course OSM must be usable in Pakistan so it must show Kashmir as 
 disputed territory otherwise it would be illegal. And in China of 
 course, we must only include mapping that as been supervised by local 
 goverments and done by mappers who are approved by central government. 
 And as for N Korea, we should probably delete that altogether.

 I'm not taking sides in the issue at hand; I just want to point out that 
 strict adherence to every national law in every country is not out no. 
 #1 priority, or even achievable at all. In all likelihood, OSM does and 
 always will violate laws in some countries; we have to make a sensible 
 choice about which laws we want to violate and where.

That might be (even if the whole ODbL move seems to be speaking otherwise,
but let's not try to pull *that* one in the discussion); but even if it is
so, going against Berne convention does not seem like the most sensible
choice to me (as quite a few countries are signatory to that one).

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Re: [OSM-legal-talk] Legal or not? user srpskicrv and source = TOPO 25 VGI BEOGRAD

2010-10-03 Thread Matija Nalis
On Sun, 3 Oct 2010 09:41:00 +0100, Francis Davey fjm...@gmail.com wrote:
 On 2 October 2010 23:29,  ed...@billiau.net wrote:
 The argument is really
 'Is the Serbian government the legal successor of the Yugoslav government
 in Serbian territories?'

 If (say) Serbia were to use OSMF or an OSM user in London, the local
 court would have to decide whether - as a matter of UK copyright law -
 Serbia were entitled to a copyright in the maps/data/whatever and if
 so whether it could be enforced. The Berne Convention requires that we
 afford the same protection to foreign copyrights as we do our own, so
 a court in England might well decide that Serbia could enforce these
 copyrights. Ditto pretty much any court in any country that was a
 signatory to the Convention.

 Of course there are massive caveats here: there might be no copyright
 in the data;

Well, ex-Yugoslavia (as well as todays Serbia) were/are both Berne
convention signatories.  The maps in question are from 1970s it seems, 
and copyright in YU was 70 years AFAIR at the time the YU falled.

So all singnatories to Berne convention should be still protecting that 
works. Now, if I understand you correctly, you propose 2 scenarions:

a) if it is likely that Serbia is successor to Yugoslavia, that the
   maps in question are still protected (unless Serbia relinquieshed
   copyright on them, which AFAIK it didn't), or

b) if the Serbia is not successor to Yugoslavia (at least in the matter of
   aforementioned copyright on maps), than that maps may be out of
   copyright.

While I agree with (a), the (b) does not seem right to me. IMHO, if Serbia
is not accepted as successor to Yugoslavia (and the matter was not resolved
by succession), then the copyright owner is missing - and should behave
like any other case of missing or unknown copyright owner (for example, if
author without successors died; or if the work was under pseudonym and never
reveled). 

And that behaviour is, to the best of my knowledge, that the copyright work
remains protected with all rights reserved (only practical difference
being that potential users now have 0% chance of buying rights from owner
anymore, as she's gone). (At least it looks so in Croatian copyright law
which is mostly the same as the ex-Yugoslav/Serbian one. Are you perhaps
arguing that under UK law if the copyright owner is not known or is not
proactively suing copyright breakers, one can legaly copy copyrighted works,
and is not in vioalation until he receives and ignores cease and desist
letter ?)

 no-one might bother to sue anyway (I've no idea how
 aggressively Serbia would try to enforce rights it believed it had).

Uh, that one (are the chances we won't be caught breaking law low enough
today?) should not be the way to handle this (or similar) issues, IMHO.

Unauthorized copying of copyrighted works is illegal. The possibly high
chances that copyright owners might not notice or might not be bothered 
to sue ATM does not make it legal.


-- 
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Re: [OSM-legal-talk] Legal or not? user srpskicrv and source = TOPO 25 VGI BEOGRAD

2010-10-02 Thread Valent Turkovic
On Fri, 01 Oct 2010 08:02:16 +, Ed Avis wrote:

 Or does srpskicrv mean that the mapping agency of Serbia is the only
 entity that claims copyright, and further that it has released the maps
 to the public domain?

Here is his answer:


Okay, even if I dont have time (this is the reason for not going on the 
mailing list, but you could give me the adress to subscribe to them), I 
am going to explain it to you:

The maps were made in the 1974-1980 years by the MILITARY GEOGRAPHICAL 
INSTITUTE of Belgrade in SOCIALISTIC FEDERATIVE REPUBLIC OF YUGOSLAVIA

1992, Yugoslavia crashed. New countries were born: Slovenia, Croatia, 
Bosnia and Hercegovina, Montenegro, Makedonia (F.Y.R.O.M.) and Serbia 
(and others say also Kosovo).

Those maps were made by the military by them own, so something 
governmental. The inhabitants were buying that and its opend source as 
long the governement or the military says NO (and they said NO)

Since the new countries exist, the VGI has NO responsibility or right to 
create maps of those countries, as long as they dont give an order to do 
so (but the didn't!)

Those countries have their own geogrphical or geodesist institutes. So: 
the VGI is selling those OLD prints and they have still an copyright on 
reproduction of those papers, BUT NOT THE CONTAINED DATA !!! The VGI has 
only responsibility on the land of Serbia (nowadays) and there, of course 
I am NOT ALLOWED to use the datas!

I agree that it is a grey zone, but who will say that its illegal? In my 
case, I am working on Bosnia (and not Croatia anymore): The VGI cannot 
accuse, cause they have not the right on the datas, its an own country!

Bosnia has no right on the datas, cause they gave no order to be made.

those maps (the datas on them) are FREE (as long as you dont use it on 
Serbian terretory).

It is difficult to explain it for me in this language, but you can trust 
me, that I am right, and as normal, there are a lot of people, who think 
in an other way. Thinking is not enough. Knowing its better. I am working 
in a govermental company in germany, which is dealing with licenses and I 
have the knowledge. I was reading constitutions and I got in contact with 
the Bosnian governement and the serbian VGI. I bought those maps by my 
own from the VGI (yes, as a foreighner you can buy those maps, but not 
those which have datas of serbia on them).

Everything what I am making should be confirmed ot the place, I wil go 
there in next spring 2011. And I will look up with my GPS if the work, I 
did is correct.

You cannot do everything by using gps, e.g. Rivers, streams, power lines, 
forests, basins etc.

I hope you understand me and you agree with me or better you trust me, 
that I am not doing anything wrong.

Yours,

Leo





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