On Thu, Feb 26, 2004 at 12:59:08PM +0000, Alex Hudson home@alexhudson.com wrote:
On Thu, 2004-02-26 at 12:39, Volker Dormeyer wrote:
if this is the case, the "public domain" category description on
http://www.gnu.org/philosophy/categories.html#PublicDomainSoftware
might be wrong, because it suggests that code without a copyright is public domain.
No, that description is correct, PD software isn't copyrighted. What I was saying was that software without a copyright notice may not be public domain: you don't *have* to put a notice on things you author, so if you wrote a piece of software tomorrow and didn't put a copyright notice on it, you would still have copyright on it and it wouldn't be public domain.
I'm interest in how someone can be certain, wether code without a copyright header is public domain or not? Does anybody know this?
You can't be certain, that's why it's recommended to put a notice on the software.
thanks.
I'm fairly sure that in the UK you can't just mark a piece of software as "public domain", although taking that action would probably mean that you would find it extremely difficult to enforce your copyright at a later point. In the UK, moral rights are not attached to software either, whereas on the continent they are - and I'm told you cannot rescind those rights either, so again you wouldn't be able to say a piece of software is public domain.
Hmm, up to now I was pretty sure, that someone can transfer the copyright to someone else or completely renounce on it. And if the copyright is renounced, it then should be public domain in my opinion.
I agree, that this is not possible on the european continent, it's called "Urheberrecht" here in Germany.
Regards Volker