http://dizzythinks.net/2009/03/government-cut-and-pastes-wikipedia-in.html
"You can read the full story on IPtegrity.com but the long and short of it is that the Government has made proposals to the EU to stamp on users rights to access content and services on the Internet, and it's done it by cutting and pasting a technical article on bandwidth management from Wikipedia without attribution."
A lot can be learned about submitting other's content with features available on browsers. For example, government actions taken below would not be a problem if the entire web page were e-mailed. That preserves the source, complete with stationery that's very probably familiar. Such things would be a gray area if someone's site is "All Rights Reserved", and you can always promote a link to someone with interests in common with you. Attitudes, maybe; interests, everything but sex, drugs, relijion, and politics. _______ Rock the house and Roll the lawyers!
"James Farrar" james.farrar@gmail.com wrote in message news:b23fe4070903101312w5fd240a2gd850f2228f3e3905@mail.gmail.com...
http://dizzythinks.net/2009/03/government-cut-and-pastes-wikipedia-in.html
"You can read the full story on IPtegrity.com but the long and short of it is that the Government has made proposals to the EU to stamp on users rights to access content and services on the Internet, and it's done it by cutting and pasting a technical article on bandwidth management from Wikipedia without attribution."
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