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So the police came out to speak with me again... (pg. 28)
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View this Thread in Original format
| Nerologic |
| quote: | Originally posted by Banora
"...Unless you give me back every ounce of piss I will sue you for swimming through my urinal cloud. The water in this pool isn't public domain!" |
:wtf: |
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| Banora |
| quote: | Originally posted by ********
I do. There are two major types of copyrighted works in Canada. |
Neither of which you are currently protected under. |
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| Nerologic |
Ohh BTW
whats up with your flow 28 track?
are you randomly hitting a midi keyboard with your feet? because that sounds horrible. |
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| ziptnf |
| quote: | Originally posted by ********
Dude, if everyone peed in the pool you'd be swimming in an overfull toilet. There is good reason to get up and out of the thing and use the toilet or urine field like everyone else. |
Trust me, they do, everyone I knew peed in the pool. Even female swimmers. It doesn't turn it into an overful toilet, the water level in pools is decreased every day, and chlorine is always being pumped in. There are pool filters, jets, gutters. Everything in a pool works together to keep it sanitary.
Think of it as a bacteria equivalent of someone not wiping their ass before they jumped in: the bacteria is still killed, and nobody is harmed. |
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| Moral Hazard |
| quote: | Originally posted by Lebezniatnikov
And does anyone know what goes in to copywriting text in Canada? Surely there's something filed in the public record somewhere like we do in the US, yes?
http://www.copyright.gov/records/ |
verifiable authorship results in a copywrite that expires 50 years after the author's death (in Canada) and for 70 years in the UK (where WA states his site is hosted). You can register but it is not necessary (nor is it in the US to my understanding). |
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| Moral Hazard |
| quote: | Originally posted by Lebezniatnikov
And does anyone know what goes in to copywriting text in Canada? Surely there's something filed in the public record somewhere like we do in the US, yes?
http://www.copyright.gov/records/ |
verifiable authorship results in a copywrite that expires 50 years after the author's death (in Canada) and for 70 years in the UK (where WA states his site is hosted). You can register but it is not necessary (nor is it in the US to my understanding).
*** EDIT *** oh no, double post... I just inadvertantly infringed upon my own copyright |
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| colonelcrisp |
| this thread, like john shaft, delivers 10 times out of 10! |
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| Lebezniatnikov |
| quote: | Originally posted by ********
Say what you like but know there can be repercussions. Be prepared for what might occur and place that on merit of your values to the greater good. Being disrespectful and rude can be a poor use of free speech.
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Is that a threat? How is what I said a poor use of my freedom of speech, but you going on about killing and attacking is a good use and protected? |
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| Moral Hazard |
| quote: | Originally posted by Lebezniatnikov
Is that a threat? How is what I said a poor use of my freedom of speech, but you going on about killing and attacking is a good use and protected? |
Sweet... we just came back to Will being a in' nutcase (allegedly) |
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| Lebezniatnikov |
| quote: | Originally posted by Moral Hazard
*** EDIT *** oh no, double post... I just inadvertantly infringed upon my own copyright |
:stongue:
This is actually something I don't know much about. So Joe Blogger can claim copyright on anything he publishes on Wordpress? Obviously he wouldn't be able to do so in a case like this, where the words aren't being used commercially or anything, but I wasn't aware that any formal protections were provided to just anything out on the internet without it having been registered somewhere. |
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| Moral Hazard |
| quote: | Originally posted by Lebezniatnikov
:stongue:
This is actually something I don't know much about. So Joe Blogger can claim copyright on anything he publishes on Wordpress? Obviously he wouldn't be able to do so in a case like this, where the words aren't being used commercially or anything, but I wasn't aware that any formal protections were provided to just anything out on the internet without it having been registered somewhere. |
Essentially if one can prove they produced an original work then they have a copyright to it. The hard part is often proving that it was an original work, as you need to be able to establish the date it was produced... not really a problem with blogs but a big problem with manuscripts. |
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| Lebezniatnikov |
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