From: Mike Rosing[SMTP:[EMAIL PROTECTED]]
On Thu, 13 Jun 2002, Lucky Green wrote:
The other half of the shears cutting away at the public's right to
entertain themselves with the artwork they purchased in any way they
please is represented by parts of the art culture of
Ken Brown[SMTP:[EMAIL PROTECTED]] wrote:
Trei, Peter wrote:
As an example, consider the Richard Serra's 'Tilted Arc', a 12 foot
high, 120 foot long, 70 ton slab of rusty (and usually grafitti covered)
steel which blocked the entrance to the main Federal building in
lower Manhatten for
From: Mike Rosing[SMTP:[EMAIL PROTECTED]]
On Thu, 13 Jun 2002, Lucky Green wrote:
The other half of the shears cutting away at the public's right to
entertain themselves with the artwork they purchased in any way they
please is represented by parts of the art culture of
These laws don't really get into cyberpunks territory, because they are
about rights that are reserved to the original artist, and cannot be
transferred to publishers or distributors or record companies, and can
only be possessed by natural persons, not corporations. So (in France,
not the USA) a
Ken Brown[SMTP:[EMAIL PROTECTED]] wrote:
Trei, Peter wrote:
As an example, consider the Richard Serra's 'Tilted Arc', a 12 foot
high, 120 foot long, 70 ton slab of rusty (and usually grafitti covered)
steel which blocked the entrance to the main Federal building in
lower Manhatten for