I can't speak for others but I consider public domain anything I contribute
to a public forum, unless I specifically say otherwise. Which I never have.
A contributor to Guns & Ammo magazine quoted - after asking my permission
- a statement I'd made on the CompuServe firearms forum regarding the Second
Amendment. Imagine my surprise.
One minute down from my fame log, 14 minutes to go.
Lex
> Before I get majorly grilled, figure I'd ask:
> what's the consensus for my providing saved posts (saved locally) by
> list members as resources for future reference? In my
> just-one-year-as-of-this-week on the OM list, I've saved things, and
> now that I have an Oly-dedicated section on my webpage, do I have to
> get permission from the original poster or is it now in the public
> domain? In particular:
>
> Tomoko's OM->EOS adapter instructions
> Hawkin's review of OptiClean
> Trottier's shutter tester
> Olaf's Bokeh document
> Phillip's lens slide show (he's granted permission)
>
> and others...these are the ones that just come to mind, there are
> others.
>
> What say you folk?
>
> /Acer V
> --
> If you can kick it, it's hardware.
> If you boot it, it's the OS.
> If after you boot it you want to kick it, it's Windows.
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