On Sat, 17 Feb 2007 04:44:36 -0200, Alexandre Oliva said: > On Feb 17, 2007, "David Schwartz" <[email protected]> wrote: > > Not so. See any of the numerous cases that explain that you cannot own a > > function using copyright. They are saying that because V J did X, he *MUST* > > be taking their code because there is no other practical way to *do* X. This > > is precisely what copyright *DOES* *NOT* *LET* *YOU* *DO*. > > So, since there's no other way to do Yesterday, exactly as performed > by the Beatles in the 1965 album Help!, I'm free to copy it, perform > it, create derived versions thereof and perform them, without paying > royalties to the current copyright holders? No, because there's other musically valid ways to perform the song - in the style of Wayne Newton, or the band Slipknot, or restyled as a Bach cantata. (Incidentally - in the case of the song Yesterday, there are *two* different performance rights to consider. The right to play the version that's on the album Help!, which (usually) means you (as a radio station, or background-music vendor, or DJ at a party, etc) need to pay royalties to somebody (usually the record label), via ASCAP or BMI (two large payment clearinghouses - usually a radio station or DJ just pays a lump-sum per month/year and ASCAP and BMI sort it out). Then there's the *music* copyright, which means that Wayne Newton's manager gets to negotiate with the group that administers the copyright on the song *itself* for how much it will cost Wayne to record his version. Then the record label gets to screw Wayne out of his share of the money that ASCAP and BMI sends the label, but that's another rant.. ;) But trying to call a kernel function in any other way than the one intended by the function's author *isn't* valid - it may not even compile, if the function's parameter list is formally incorrect, or it will likely OOPS (perhaps later, after a stray pointer does a fandango on core). And since there *is* only one valid way to call (for instance) kzalloc(), it becomes a 'scenes au faire', which is what the Lexmark ruling was about.
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