On Wed, 20 Aug 1997, Adam Back wrote:
Is it possible to include text in a web page? I know you can do images (as in the above example) by doing:
Look what the silly copyright police are doing...
<IMG SRC="http://copyright.police.com/copyright-image.gif">
isn't that a daft claim?
And copyright.police.com is serving their own image so they have no grounds for complaint. (Moi? I just referenced it... it was Joe Q Publics web browser which combined my text and your copyrighted image).
Right, so this isn't an infringement on their so-called rights because your document does not contain the image but just the link. The problem, I think, is in thinking of the HTML document as a completed work and not a set of instructions, for which it is. The completed "page" exists soley on the screen of the browsing party, and the copyright-image.gif graphic in question was obtained from the copyright.police.com web site and not yours. Plus, I think it could be further argued that by putting any information on the Web implies that you are allowing any other party on the Web to link to it in any way they so choose.
Now I don't think you can do
<TEXT SRC="http://copyright.police.com/copyright-article.html">
directly, but I'd be willing to bet you could do it with javascript/or java, in such a way that the viewer wouldn't really figure out where the various parts of the current "page" were coming from.
A very useful program would be one which could obtain a portion of text from any page, or obtain the text from a page _starting_ at a certain point, not unlike the <http://somplace.com/somedoc.html#foo> notation, but without the <a name="foo"> tag having to exist. Then, any portion of text from any page could be easily referenced.
Anyway, the copyright police, WIPO, SPA etc. are the enemy in my book. The difficulty of trying to applying these old laws to the internet where they hardly make sense, suggests that copyright is going to have to "give" longer term to adjust to reality. Legislation against gravity never works out long term.
For sure. In a geodesic network, the center will not hold. m email stutz@dsl.org Copyright (c) 1997 Michael Stutz; this information is <http://dsl.org/m/> free and may be reproduced under GNU GPL, and as long as this sentence remains; it comes with absolutely NO WARRANTY; for details see <http://dsl.org/copyleft/>.