[License-review] [License-discuss] CC0 incompliant with OSD on patents, [was: MXM compared to CC0 ]

Alexander Terekhov alexander.terekhov at gmail.com
Thu Mar 8 21:40:53 UTC 2012


On Thu, Mar 8, 2012 at 9:51 PM, Rick Moen <rick at linuxmafia.com> wrote:
[...]
> a fallback permissive licence, the document's fundamental reason for
> existing is foolhardy: the delusional belief that creative works can be
> safely magicked into the public domain despite a worldwide copyright
> regime, and the equally delusional belief that it's even desirable to
> try (and thereby, among other problems, have no protection against
> warranty claims).

http://cr.yp.to/publicdomain.html

"Placing documents into the public domain

Most rights can be voluntarily abandoned ("waived") by the owner of
the rights. Legislators can go to extra effort to create rights that
can't be abandoned, but usually they don't do this.
In particular, you can voluntarily abandon your United States copyrights:

It is well settled that rights gained under the Copyright Act may be
abandoned. But abandonment of a right must be manifested by some overt
act indicating an intention to abandon that right. See Hampton v.
Paramount Pictures Corp., 279 F.2d 100, 104 (9th Cir. 1960).
Micro-Star v. Formgen Inc., 154 F.3d 1107 (9th Cir. 1998).

Note for people not familiar with legal citations: After a "District
Court" makes its decision in a United States court case, the losing
party can appeal to the "Circuit Court of Appeals" that supervises the
district court. These "Circuit Courts of Appeals" are manned by about
200 of the nation's most experienced judges. Each appeal is heard by
three of these appellate judges; for example, the "Micro-Star v.
Formgen" appeal was heard by Alex Kozinski, David R. Thompson, and
Stephen S. Trott. Judge Kozinski, with agreement from the other two
judges, wrote the decision in the case (in 1998). My quote is from
Judge Kozinski's decision.

Does the public domain exist in Europe too?

Yes. You can voluntarily abandon your European copyrights. You can't
abandon certain reputation rights (such as the right to stop people
from removing your name from your work), but you can abandon your
copyrights.

How do I place my work into the public domain?

The normal way to abandon a copyright is to make a clear written
dedication of the work to the public domain. For example:

Most documents have a conventional location for a copyright notice
(e.g., the bottom of page 1 of a scientific paper). You can write
"Public domain" in this location rather than "Copyright 2005,"
"Copyright 2006," etc. This, by itself, clearly satisfies the "overt
act" test.

You can write a subsequent document saying "I hereby place my paper
`On The Origin Of Species' into the public domain." This, by itself,
clearly satisfies the "overt act" test.

How do courts resolve disputes over public-domain status?

The Ninth Circuit Model Civil Jury Instructions, 2007 edition, Section
17.19, states a model for the text that courts give to juries:

17.19 COPYRIGHT - AFFIRMATIVE DEFENSE - ABANDONMENT

The defendant contends that a copyright does not exist in the
plaintiff's work because the plaintiff abandoned the copyright. The
plaintiff cannot claim ownership of the copyright if it was abandoned.
In order to show abandonment, the defendant has the burden of proving
each of the following by a preponderance of the evidence:

1. the plaintiff intended to surrender [ownership] rights in the work; and

2. an act by the plaintiff evidencing that intent.

Mere inaction [, or publication without a copyright notice,] does not
constitute abandonment of the copyright; however, [this may be a
factor] [these may be factors] for you to consider in determining
whether the plaintiff has abandoned the copyright.

If you find that the plaintiff has proved [his] [her] [its] claim[s]
in accordance with Instruction[s] [insert cross reference to the
pertinent instructions on the plaintiff's theory of infringement],
your verdict should be for the plaintiff, unless you find that the
defendant has proved each of the elements of this affirmative defense,
in which event your verdict should be for the defendant.

See also Section 20.19 in the 2001 edition.

Isn't it impossible to place work into the public domain?

Lawrence Rosen is a lawyer who makes money helping people create, and
comply with, complicated copying conditions. In an essay titled "Why
the public domain isn't a license," Rosen claims that a clear written
dedication of a copyrighted work to the public domain doesn't actually
abandon copyright. In particular, Rosen claims that "Intellectual
property enters the public domain only when it grows old" and that
"There is no mechanism in the law by which an owner of software can
simply elect to place it in the public domain."

If you see a Ninth Circuit panel writing "It is well settled that
rights gained under the Copyright Act may be abandoned," and then a
lawyer making the opposite claim, you probably expect the lawyer to
explain the contradiction. Rosen doesn't do this. In fact, he doesn't
seem to be aware that he's contradicting anybody, let alone three
federal judges and the Ninth Circuit Model Civil Jury Instructions.

Let's look at the details of Rosen's argument:

Rosen claims an analogy between littering and abandoning a copyright:
"Just as there is nothing in the law that permits a person to dump
personal property in the public highway, there is nothing that permits
the dumping of intellectual property into the public domain."

In fact, there are laws against littering, and those laws put
considerable limits on the ways in which you can abandon your real
property. There are no laws against abandoning a copyright.

Rosen claims that placement into the public domain is a "gift" that
"cannot be enforced" (under "basic contract law") and that can be
"retract[ed] at any time." He says that this is "scant security for
someone intending to make long-term use of a piece of software."

Rosen doesn't seem to understand the differences between waivers,
gifts, and contracts. It's true that a gratuitous promise, a contract
without "consideration," generally can't be enforced: someone who
makes a promise, without being promised anything in return, can
retract the promise. But this has no relevance to a gift that has been
given; a donor cannot demand that his gift be returned. It also has no
relevance to a right that has been waived.

Rosen claims that public-domain software can't be distributed "as is,"
without warranty. Rosen also observes, correctly, that public-domain
software allows recipients to "make secret changes to the donated
software and re-release the changed version to the world for a fee
under a proprietary license."

This part of Rosen's essay follows his general "Public domain is
evil!" theme but obviously doesn't support his "Public domain is
nonexistent!" claim.

If these are the best arguments that Rosen can come up with, I'm not
surprised to see judges saying that they're "settled" on the opposite
position. "



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