On Wed, 25 Jul 2001, Eric D. Williams wrote: > Re: the lack of legal backing here are a number of links that appear relevant > to the question (do you violate copyright by publishing hacker code, discovered > subsequent to intrusion?). Indeed it appears that the law is fuzzy on this one > concerning copyright and intellectual property. But, given the circumstance > that a listing or binary of the aformentioned code can not be deterined as > authorized in the first case - the intrusion itself is illegal, it appears it > can not pass the copyright or intellectual property tests. > > Refs with USC refs: > http://www.eff.org/Publications/Mike_Godwin/phrack_riggs_neidorf_godwin.article > Ref with USC footnotes: http://www.netatty.com/copyright.html In the US, a copyright must be registered with the US Copyright Office if you wish to pursue legal action against someone else for violation of your copyright. That is not to imply that a work is not protected by copyright unless it is registered, it's just that any sort of recourse is not available to you until you do register. This comes directly from the Library of Congress Copyright Office FAQ located at http://www.loc.gov/copyright/faq.html. Sections 13 and 14 are of obvious importance. Regards, -- Joseph W. Shaw II Network Security Specialist/CCNA Unemployed. Will hack for food. God Bless. Apparently I'm overqualified but undereducated to be employed.
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