under US copyright law.
Well, I'd really like to know how your patriotic sentiments were hurt by
Bernd in the above sentence. Maybe we Europeans are not compassionate
enough, it seems, as I can see absolutely nothing anti-american in his
posting. Maybe mentioning the existence of other countries/laws is
nowadays considered anti-american?
I'm sorry I posted that, this thread is OT anyway. I'm just annoyed
when people who don't know US law speculate about how terrible it is
(like the common misconception that reverse engineering for
interoperability is banned in the US). Of course I don't think that
pointing out differences is anti-American.
Lee
And I'm sorry for my language (well, I'm actually not, but of course I
only wanted to provoke). The thing is probably that Non-Americans often
get a bit irritated when U.S. posters start talking about law on lklm
and not seldom seem to imply that the U.S. law is the only relevant one
in regard of Linux. Of course the GPL was written in the U.S., but Linux
was GPL'ed back in Finland, Linus used to be non-american, Alan Cox
still is and the number of Linux installation outside the U.S. certainly
far outnumbers the ones within the states. And when the pointing out of
this fact is considered anti-american I get quite furious. At least we
Europeans have not much else in the computing industry apart from Linux,
you know (apart from having invented the computer).
Tim
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