On 8/24/07, Eugene van der Pijll <eugene(a)vanderpijll.nl> wrote:
Gregory Maxwell schreef:
On 8/24/07, Eugene van der Pijll
<eugene(a)vanderpijll.nl> wrote:
If you define a "Document" to mean a
single page of Wikipedia,
The document is an article. It spans multiple http fetched pages.
There is nothing surprising about this.
There is, actually, as neither Athony, nor me, nor apparently Thomas
Dalton ("I think "the Document" is usually taken as meaning an
individual page.") knew this.
It's also not an answer. From this definition I know that "the
Document" is synonymous with "an article" and that it "spans mutiple
http fetched pages", but I don't know what those http fetched pages
are.
Take an article like [[Gmail]] or [[List of Google products]]. What
is "the Document" for those articles? Where is the Transparent copy?
If I want to create a derivative work based on one of those articles,
and I don't want to do so by clicking on "edit this page", what do I
do?
The only way the answer to this is not surprising is if you've been
drinking the kool-aid for way way too long and you forget that there's
a world out there who hasn't heard about any of this stuff. Most
judges, for instance, are going to hear that "the Document" is "an
article" and they're going to think you mean essentially this:
http://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=List_of_Google_products&print…