[XML-DEV Mailing List Archive Home] [By Thread] [By Date] [Recent Entries] [Reply To This Message] RE: Copyrighting schemas, Hailstorm (strayed a bit)
-----Original Message----- From: David Brownell [mailto:david-b@p...] >You're presuming a particular outcome of that >debate though ... I'd say that anyone who's really >internalized distinctions between different types of >identifiers (addresses, names, paths, ...) it's quite >clear that there are so many common practices that >alleging one of them to be "common sense" is just a >non-starting position. The same identifier can be >any of the above, depending on context and usage. If they see "http://anything ", they click on it. The context is the browser and web user not privy to the abstractions of the specification. >> The big issue is what a URI means with >> regards to the ownership of the definition >> of the information it identifies. That >> comes back to the original thread topic >> where yes (despite claims to the contrary), >> the URI may be the assertion of the Copyright >> that sticks (hostile assertion of domain). >Again you're presuming ... just because you call >a table a book doesn't make it become one. Perhaps a presumption. But just because we call "http://anything" an identifier doesn't mean the courts aren't free to make it evidence of proprietary labeling and the asserting of ownership given that within the system in which it operates, it is presumed to be unique and therefore, the one assertion that meets the criteria of being capable of supporting that assertion. "Quacks like a duck." This doesn't make it right; it makes it useful and so far, utility has been the one argument used to support the URI definition: it is convenient. Again, an issue of the authority to choose a choice. In this case, the W3C and IETF aren't the authorities. >I have the feeling Alice must have had when talking to >Humpty Dumpty. Sure, go ahead and assert whatever >you want. These issues haven't been litigated, and are >unresolved (THAT was the original issue) except that >Internet standards disagree with what you asserted. *Private consortia cannot make law*. You are falling off the wall and the king's men can put you together again, but perhaps they won't. By choosing to sit on the wall, you assumed the risk. len
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