- From: Max Romantschuk <max@provico.fi>
- Date: Mon, 05 Jul 2004 14:14:47 +0300
C Williams wrote: > iv.) Possibly puts you on dubious legal ground. > > ========== > > 3.)"This specification clarifies and extends the semantics put > forth in [HTML4] for form controls and form submission." > [1.1. Relationship to HTML] > "some of the features added in this module only apply to XHTML > documents" > [1.2. Relationship to XHTML] > > Can you actually say this, in the legal sense? > > The W3C Document License > [http://www.w3.org/Consortium/Legal/2002/copyright-documents-20021231] > under which the specifications are released, states: > "No right to create modifications or derivatives of W3C > documents is granted pursuant to this license." Modifications and derivatives do not apply here. A derivative work is not the same thing as a new work which references an earlier work. Referencing W3C's specs is not an issue. > The W3C Intellectual Rights Notice and Legal Disclaimers > [http://www.w3.org/Consortium/Legal/2002/ipr-notice-20021231] > states: > "No material may be modified, edited or *taken out of context* > such that its use creates a false or misleading statement or > impression as to the positions, statements or actions of W3C." > > Sure, there's grey area there, but I'm not *certain*, legally, > that you're allowed to even purport to extend their specs* in > any way. Note that I'm talking about the language used, not the > idea. Which leads to ... I'm not sure exactly what you're aiming at here, but please elaborate. HTML is not owned by the W3C if that is your concern. HTML is a de-facto standard, which happens to be closely related to W3C's recommendations. Disclaimer: I am not a lawyer. These are just my own interpretations, and I certainly am no expers on international copyright law. .max PS. I think C Williams makes many good points, despite the somewhat offensive stance of his eralier post ;) I'm sure many of them need to be adressed if the WHATWG specs are to be taken seriously. -- Max Romantschuk http://max.nma.fi/
Received on Monday, 5 July 2004 04:14:47 UTC