Author: Slater Wold
Date: 20:44:35 04/30/02
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On April 30, 2002 at 16:16:16, Dann Corbit wrote: >On April 30, 2002 at 16:01:33, Slater Wold wrote: >>I can understand your frustration. You've worked just as hard as Ed or >>Christophe on Rebel/Tiger. No doubt your books add a considerable amount of Elo >>to these programs, and I am sure Ed and Christophe are very appreciative of >>that. >> >>However, I must warn you that laying claim to a series of chess opening moves is >>not going to be easy to defend. You cannot copyright moves in chess, as you >>cannot copyright dance moves. While you can copyright a mvs book, you are >>actually only copyrighting the format. Again, you cannot copyright chess moves. >> >>I think anyone found 'hacking' a chess program, or its book, should face a >>severe punishment. Anyone claiming something is their, when in fact it is not, >>should be punished. >> >>I am not defending these people, I am simply stating the fact that it would be >>easier to encrypt the books, than to go after those stealing it. > >While you cannot copyright chess moves, you can copyright a particular >collection as a whole. (For example, a book of analysis about Bobby Fischer's >chess games can be copyrighted). Once again, then you'd be copyrighting the analysis. NOT THE GAMES. You cannot copyright the games. Period. >I'm not a lawyer, so I don't know what the repercussions are for an opening >book. But it is pretty clear that you should not simply use someone's work and >claim that it is yours. To you and I, killing someone is just one of the basic "don't"s in life. It's not like that to everyone else, unfortuantly.
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