RE: A89: Me distributing roms
[Prev][Next][Index][Thread]
RE: A89: Me distributing roms
but if the stricter law was the one out of your country how could it be
enforced. And furtur more lots of punishments other countries use are banned
here for being unconstitional to our civil rights, what if one of their
punishments called for death =] (Who judges strictness)
-----Original Message-----
From: owner-assembly-89@lists.ticalc.org
[mailto:owner-assembly-89@lists.ticalc.org]On Behalf Of Kaus
Sent: Monday, January 17, 2000 6:09 PM
To: assembly-89@lists.ticalc.org
Subject: Re: A89: Me distributing roms
internet law is a new thing, but it _does_ exist.
you take the laws applying in the country of the server, and that of the
client. the stricter one applies.
--kaus
----- Original Message -----
From: Serial <Serial@earthlink.net>
To: <assembly-89@lists.ticalc.org>
Sent: Monday, January 17, 2000 7:58 PM
Subject: RE: A89: Me distributing roms
>
> The law is not the law. On the internet your NOT UNDER LAWS. I mean god
> dammit, if you need so much example, what if you live in austrillia, and
> what if austrillia said we dont enforce internet laws. How the hell would
> you be breaking a law!
>
> -----Original Message-----
> From: owner-assembly-89@lists.ticalc.org
> [mailto:owner-assembly-89@lists.ticalc.org]On Behalf Of Alan C Johnson
> Sent: Friday, January 14, 2000 7:07 PM
> To: assembly-89@lists.ticalc.org
> Subject: Re: A89: Me distributing roms
>
>
>
> Look, no matter how you try to reason this out, the law is the law and
> the law says you *can't* distribute someone elses software freely without
> their permission. It doesn't matter if it happens through the internet,
> on floppy disks, or another way. Disclaimers are meaningless, they are
> only a statement. They can prosecute anyone who illegaly distributes
> software without the authors permission
>
> Alan
>
> > ------------------------------
> >
> > Date: Fri, 14 Jan 2000 15:40:38 -0800
> > From: "Serial" <Serial@earthlink.net>
> > Subject: Re: A89: Me distributing roms.
> >
> > see the thing is. The internet is public domain. It's precisly the
> > opposite
> > on the internet. If someone doesn't say it's private then it's not.
> > Unlike
> > say the Owner of the lawnmower saying it is free and you can take it
> > because
> > of that and if it's on his lawn and you take it without him knowing
> > it's
> > thieft, on the internet if it's on his lawn it's automatically free.
> > He
> > would have to put a sign up saying do not take and while maybe a
> > case could
> > be formed against someone who did it'd never get prosecuted. The
> > internet
> > has over 400 million people that pass through it in a single day,
> > the law on
> > a public network is not only free is that which you can attain but
> > even
> > extends to free is that which you can attain from sources other than
> > its
> > distrobutor. You'll notice that precisly for reasons such as this
> > adobe
> > doesn't offer a download of it on their site. (Trialware maybe?) If
> > they did
> > no words other than not being there in the first place are
> > equivalent to do
> > not touch.
>
> ________________________________________________________________
> YOU'RE PAYING TOO MUCH FOR THE INTERNET!
> Juno now offers FREE Internet Access!
> Try it today - there's no risk! For your FREE software, visit:
> http://dl.www.juno.com/get/tagj.
>
>
>
Follow-Ups:
References: