"samsloan" schrieb im Newsbeitrag
news:20d61933-5b15-46b7...@a15g2000vbf.googlegroups.com...
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In other words you plagiarized not only the Encyclopedia but also Wikipedia.
Wikipedia allows copying freely, provided that the license terms are adhered
to.
This certainly does not mean that you are free to claim authorship for text
lifted from Wiki.
As to Russian Copyright Law, you are, as usual, completely wrong. Russia
joined
the Berne Convention in 1995 and this has a *retroactive* effect on books
published in Russia.
For your further edification, here is a sample U.S. court case:
Facts:
Itar-Tass Russian News Agency sued Kurier, a Russian-language newspaper in
New York that copied articles originally published by Itar-Tass, for
copyright
violation. District court held for Itar-Tass; Kurier appealed.
Decision Affirmed:
Under the Berne Convention and Universal Copyright Convention, the issue
of ownership of copyrights in works created by Russian nationals and first
published in Russia would be determined under the law of Russia, which
was the country of origin. The owner of the copyright, including one under
Russian law, may sue for infringement in U.S. courts if it has standing,
which Itar-Tass does since the articles were copied in the U.S.
Under Russian law, Itar-Tass did not own copyright in the text of the
articles,
but had protectable rights in their arrangement and display.