FF wrote:
Sure, we use "fair use text" but that means "quotations" and not wholesale copying. We're allowed to write an article about the interview, describing and even quoting from it when relevant but we're not allowed to just copy and re-print the entire interview.
*Probably* not. Fair use can include and has included up to the entire work in question.
- d.
Well, sure. In certain situations, for certain uses. But I don't suspect this really qualifies as one of them, and in any event it is not necessary to find out, since copies of the transcript are apparently not hard to find elsewhere.
In any event, *Wikipedia* does not include whole copies of *any* documents. That's what Wikisource is for, yes?
(I apologize for my tending towards blanket statements at times, and I apologize for often blending legal and policy issues into them without properly demarcating between the two.)
FF
On 12/6/05, David Gerard dgerard@gmail.com wrote:
FF wrote:
Sure, we use "fair use text" but that means "quotations" and not wholesale copying. We're allowed to write an article about the interview, describing and even quoting from it when relevant but we're not allowed to just copy and re-print the entire interview.
*Probably* not. Fair use can include and has included up to the entire work in question.
- d.
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On 12/6/05, Fastfission fastfission@gmail.com wrote:
In any event, *Wikipedia* does not include whole copies of *any* documents. That's what Wikisource is for, yes?
Well, with the obvious exception of the GFDL anyway.