As far as I understand it, these figures would be derivative works from
public domain works... and their author would get copyright !
Cordialement,
Jean-Baptiste Soufron, Doctorant
CERSA - CNRS, Paris 2
http://soufron.free.fr
Le 11 avr. 05, à 23:42, Edward Peschko a écrit :
hey all,
sorry if this is a FAQ - and I'm not sure if this question belongs in
this
mailing list - but since it concerns the legal side of the fence wrt
wikipedia contributions here goes:
What's the legal status of data retrieved from non-public domain
sources?
I understand that text that is retrieved from copyrighted materials is
copyrighted, but how about data and figures that deal with common
interest
topics? Can you really copyright the amount of wheat grown in a year in
bangladesh, or the number of accidents in a year on california roads?
And how about graphs? Is data that is extrapolated from graphs and
used in derivative graphs considered a 'creative work' of its own?
I'd think so, but I just want to be sure..
Ed
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