Copyright - what it means

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Copyright is an issue for everyone’s  concern, you may not even realise it by you might be braking copyright laws just by forwarding certain e-mails or copying and pasting information from a website.

Copyright gives authors or artists the legal right to exclude others from using their works. It arises automatically when a protectable work has been fixed in a tangible medium such as a floppy disk or hard drive. A poem or picture is as much protected on a disk as on a piece of paper.

Foreign copyright owners need not register. Uk owners, however, must register before bringing suit. Notice is not required. Still, promptly registering works provide legal advantages -- as does providing some kind of notice that rights are retained. These matters are explained below, along with basic limits to copyright protection.

Copyright is the right to exclude, not to publish.
Copyright does not give its owners the right to sell or distribute, for example, libellous email messages. Also, of course, works that are obscene or invade another's rights of privacy or publicity are not publishable just because they happen to be covered by copyright.

Copyright: Basic limits.
Although email messages and web pages may enjoy copyright protection, rights are subject to several fundamental limits. For example, only expression is protected, not facts or ideas. Also, later works that merely happen to be very similar (or even identical) to earlier works do not infringe if they were, in fact, independently created. Sources of general information on those topics are listed below.

Licenses implied in fact.
Fair use allows limited uses of another's work without approval, but other uses may be approved by implication. For example, when a message is posted to a public email list, both forwarding and archiving seem to be impliedly allowed. It is reasonable to assume that such liberties are okay if not explicitly forbidden. However, when forwarding, archiving or, say, using part of a prior message to respond to an earlier message, be careful not to change the original meaning. No one impliedly authorizes another to attribute to them an embarrassing (or worse) message they did not write!

One web site confidently asserts that all list owners must approve before email can be forwarded. Yet, absent rules governing particular lists, I am unaware of any legal basis for it. Why would the power of approval be implicitly given to list owners? Beyond that, few who post to email lists would object if their messages are forwarded to others apt to be interested.

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In the same vein, it seems unlikely that many authors would object to having messages archived, perhaps on a web page. That serves the interests of list members who may want to revisit topics addressed earlier. Indeed, most would prefer archives to seeing old topics rehashed -- why one often sees lists of frequently asked questions (FAQs), with answers.

Can people revoke implied permission once granted? Circumstances allowing that seem rare. Courts are, at best, reluctant to allow someone to impose a difficult burden on others. Email authors should be careful. Inadvertent messages could be removed from archives, but ...

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