Clive D.W. Feather wrote:
Martin Burnicki said:
Hm, I've just had a look at the current file once more: https://hpiers.obspm.fr/iers/bul/bulc/ntp/leap-seconds.list
I don't see any copyright statement at all in it, nor in the directory containing the file.
Irrelevant. Copyright exists and can't be made not to exist.
Yes, I know this. I just wondered where the difference comes from that the IERS file is considered to be copyrighted in the sense that it may not be copied or redistributed, while the NIS file is considered to be in the public domain, even though neither of the files contains a correspondent statement.
(You're in Germany, right? You're subject to the Copyright Directive and the Berne Convention, same as I am.)
Yes, I'm in Germany.
Would we require a statement telling explicitly that permission to copy the file is granted?
Yes.
I'm not sure how the staff of IERS feel about this, but this sounds like the kind of thing that might perhaps be solved by a simple request.
Indeed.
In the mean time it turned out this assumption is correct. The folks who make the file available are just more technicians and scientists than lawyers. ;-) Martin -- Martin Burnicki Senior Software Engineer MEINBERG Funkuhren GmbH & Co. KG Email: martin.burnicki@meinberg.de Phone: +49 (0)5281 9309-14 Fax: +49 (0)5281 9309-30 Lange Wand 9, 31812 Bad Pyrmont, Germany Amtsgericht Hannover 17HRA 100322 Geschäftsführer/Managing Directors: Günter Meinberg, Werner Meinberg, Andre Hartmann, Heiko Gerstung Web: http://www.meinberg.de