On 22/10/14 10:50, glen stark wrote:
> On Mon, 06 Oct 2014 18:46:01 +0000, Richard wrote:
>
>> [Please do not mail me a copy of your followup]
>>
>> At the end of each chapter in "The C++ Programming Language", 4th
>> edition, Bjarne Stroustrup has a list of advice. I found the advice
>> very helpful and decided that the advice should be online somewhere.
>>
>> Initially I put this together as a PPT presentation, but oh my lord,
>> it was too long. Instead, I made a page in my user space on the
>>
cppreference.com wiki:
>> <
http://en.cppreference.com/w/User:Legalize/
> Advice_from_Bjarne_Stroustrup>
>>
>> This let me link to other pages on the wiki describing specific language
>> features where possible.
>>
>> Hopefully you will find it useful.
>
>
> This thread has been an excellent example of the "chilling effect" of
> copyright law. In my (non-legal) opinion, what you did was perfectly
> ethical, and covered under fair-use contingency of copyright law.
One big problem with "fair use" is that the legal definition varies
wildly from country to country, and some countries have no "fair use"
clause at all.
An even bigger problem is that non-lawyers usually haven't the faintest
clue as to what "fair use" means legally, even within their country.
People often seem to think it means "I can't copy /everything/, but it's
okay to copy bits that I want and do what I like with them". That's
pretty much the only interpretation that "allows" this particular
example of copyright abuse. It should be pretty obvious, but this is
certainly not "fair use" in any country's definition.
"Fair use" /usually/ allows for /brief/ quotations, when the source
clearly marked. It allows for longer extracts to be used for
educational purposes (such as quoting a book in a school essay - but
/not/ photocopies of pages handed out to students). It allows for small
extracts in reviews of the original work (so that the copyright owner
cannot stop negative reviews). And it allows for parodies which are
clearly distinct from the "real" work.
I don't see how blanket copying of a range of useful tips and advice
from a book is "fair use". If you want advice from Bjarne Stroustrup,
then buy his books, or read his online publications (which includes a
great deal of useful tips and information, which /he/ has chosen to
share publicly).
>
> Unfortunately fair-use has been dangerously eroded, so you were probably
> wise to follow the conservative advice of the other posters, but I
> consider it a minor injustice, and would encourage you to question
> copyright:
>
>
www.questioncopyright.org
>
Yes, "fair use" has often been dangerously eroded. But it does not help
matters to encourage rampant abuse of it.