On Friday 19 August 2005 12:26, Shayne O'Connor wrote:
That's an
assumption on your part which I don't share. You have to
consciously accept a contract (i.e. sign it or =) in order for it to be
binding under British law (ANAL). I think you have to at least shake
hands in order for it even to be considered a 'gentleman's agreement'.
which brings me back to my (and probably your) point - what *are* we
allowed to do with it? by allowing us to download the song ie - copy it
- you have granted us some sort of rights, haven't you? how far do these
rights go (i'm talking only in the context of what a CC license allows)?
No, I don't believe any rights are granted if there is no license.
- if we
*weren't*, then we'd potentially be exposing everyone on the list to
breaking the law.
Really?!? I will be very careful about what I post on this list if that
_is_ the case. It would be good to clarify this.
I think I'm slightly at odds with the consensus here. I am primarily a
writer of music, before even being a performer or player. I am still
quite new to using computers for this task. While I think Free Licensing
for creative works is a good idea, I'm not entirely convinced by the
ramifications. My chief worry is that while I would be flattered if any
of my music was used to promote something I believe in, I would be mighty
pissed off if it got used to advertise some ecologically damaging product
or xenophobic attitude.
this has got nothing to do with creative commons licensing.
That so doesn't answer my reservations.
The problem
with advertising and music is that it's much more emotional
than software. If someone with radically different politics uses that
software very publicly, it doesn't imply any kind of endorsement of the
final product on the part of the software developer. Music or a public
appearance does create the impression of endorsement. As an audience's
support is somewhat style dependent, this can be critical. Ozric
Tentacles lost a lot of fans over the Ford commercial they did.
selling your music to a product is sick, i hope most people would agree.
unless, i guess, you write jingles for a living.
I'm not talking about selling my music to a product, it's not sick, it's
business. If it were a product I believed in I would have no qualms about
pursuing such a course of action. Any piece under a completely free license
could be used by any company for a free jingle totally legally. There would
be no way to stop this. Highly unlikely, I'll wager. But that's not the
point. I shall keep asking this question until I get a satisfactory answer.
--
cheers,
tim hall
http://glastonburymusic.org.uk/tim