amethyst wrote: Fri May 17, 2024 3:04 am
@mikeslr and others. All the stuff that I posted on this forum is in public domain and can be used by anyone. The utility suite for example has been included in some recent puppys so is readily available anyway. The reason why I deleted some stuff is because I won't actively be participating on this forum anymore, not support any of my own work and thus won't be available to answer any questions about it or make any improvements/changes to already existing applications. I won't be producing anything new either. I may make a zip file and include all/some of my applications that I still have on record and upload it to an external site and give a download link for those interested in using it...but won't be giving any support nor partake in any discussions concerning the applications. Cheers.
Thanks, amethyst, for the post. I'm really less peeved
and less saddened.
If it means anything to you, you will be missed. I, for one, consider your Utility-Suite essential; and you other contributions valuable and insightful. TBH, I wish there was a way for me to devote less of my time to Puppy. I have other, more pressing, interests. But I am a creature of habit. I start each day reading the new posts on the Forum and, like Michael Corleone, "they pull me back in".
FWIW, any writing published after January 1, 1978 has copyright protection for 70 years, and under some circumstances a long as 120. With certain exceptions, https://www.lib.sfu.ca/help/academic-in ... -copyright, a work is entitled to copyright protection as soon as its author fixes the work in a tangible form of expression. The author doesn't even have to declare it to be copyrighted. [Copyright filings, Offices in which they are filed, and the Laws and regulations relating to them have as their supposed objective the reduction of costly litigation relating to copyright infringements*]. However, authors have the right to waive or limit the extent of the protection otherwise provided by law. If not already and otherwise, you just did.
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In reality, our copyright laws make little sense. They were originally passed to encourage creativity and innovation ... Nevermind. I've decided against spending time and effort detailing the insanity which results when you try to enforce the mindset of those who 200+ years ago wrote laws and their methods of enforcement for what was essentially an agricultural society where little changed from generation to generations and publications consisted of poems, book, and new print --all requiring the harvesting of trees-- to a dynamic environment dominated by monetary interests, where the publication of a Kernel runs to millions of lines of code which will be modified 10 times within a year, and the most valuable publication for a little while will be the latest performance of a Super-Star digitized and streamed.